Most well-known for her recent roles in productions such as “The Pirate Queen” (2007), and her performance as Liza Minelli alongside Hugh Jackman in the show “The Boy From Oz,” Stephanie J. Block just accepted the role of Elphaba in New York’s cast of “Wicked” the musical on Aug. 31, according to an article posted on the Chicago Tribune Web site. Block, who played the role in the first national tour of the production in 2005, which later scored her the 2006 Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actress. With an extensive acting career under her belt, including staring on several television shows such as “Three’s Company,” “Life Goes On” and “General Hospital,” Block also has put in time on Broadway in productions such as “Guys and Dolls,” “Grease,” “Oliver” and “Bye Bye Birdie.”
Her newest election to the ranks of Wicked’s New York cast as Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, who is “green” with envy over her counterpart, Glinda, the Good Witch of the East. The two meet as girls at sorcery school and are matched up as oddly-paired roommates. As the two get closer, however, they learn that they just misunderstand each other’s motives. Their lives conitnue to stay connected as both girls fall for the same love interest and find themselves on the same journey to the Emerald City. This story about the land of Oz before Dorothy and Toto drop in has underlying themes of the underdog overcoming the odds and explains how the two’s unlikely friendship finally dissolved. For Wicked tickets to any of the national tour locations, which include London, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Australia, visit Stubhub.com.
“Wicked” the musical celebrated its 1,000th run on Aug. 15 in a national tour that the company launched more than two years ago in Toronto’s Canon Theatre, according to an Aug. 15 article posted at Playbill.com. Since that time, the production has been experienced by more than 2.65 million spectators and has played in many big cities including Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Philadelphia, Boston and Washington D.C. and the tour is tentatively scheduled to continue through January 2008. The touring company features Victoria Matlock as Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda, the Good Witch of the East, is played by actress Christina DeCicco. Accompanying cast includes Barbara Tirrell as Madame Morrible and P.J. Benjamin as The Wizard. The Broadway hit musical, written by Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman and based on the nobel by Gregory Maguire, is now playing at the Academy of Muisc in Philadelphia, PA, through Sept. 9.
“Wicked” unveils the history of the land of Oz and the witches, both good and wicked, who live there. Elphaba and Glinda meet as youngsters at sorcery school, where the unlikely pair are accidentally made roommates. After learning a few crucial lessons, the two begin to understand each other a bit more and their lives continue to intersect as they share a love interest and journey to the Emerald City. The musical is also playing at New York’s Gershwin Theatre, Los Angeles’ Pantages Theatre, Chicago’s Ford Center Oriental Theatre, London’s Apollo Victoria Theatre and in Tokyo, Japan. Shows in Stutgart, Germany open Nov. 15 and in Melbourne Australia on July 12, 2008. For Wicked tickets, visit Stubhub.com for all the best deals.
“Wicked,” which has become one of Broadway’s regularly highest grossing musicals since it opened four years ago, may be partially responsible for a new influx of girl-geared musicals, according to an April 2007 Times Magazine article.The fun and frilly script, much like those of some of Broadway’s hottest new shows like “Legally Blonde, The Musical,” “Hairspray” and “The Color Purple,” appeals to a younger audience, especially girls between the ages of 10 or 11 through late teens. With themes that center on misfits or underdogs who prove their worth in spite of the odds, these Broadway musicals are appealing to a younger crowd of girls who can relate emotionally to such topics, according to the Times’ article author Richard Zoglin. In “Wicked,” young girls can relate with the character of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West who is actually just misundertsood. These “tweens” - floating in a precarious stage between youth and adults - can easily connect with the musical’s themes of friendship, prejudice and self-realization, according to Zoglin.
As Broadway cracks down on drawing in a more youthful audience, the majority of those attending musicals such as “Wicked” are females, according to the Times Magazine. But that is nothing new for the theater hub - musicals have been traditionally geared toward female audiences, typically drawing in about 62 percent of women and girls. As these type of women-powered productions gain momentum, “Wicked” continues to bask in the successes of a national tour that has catapulted the show from Broadway to far corners of the U.S., London and Australia. To secure “Wicked” tickets in your neck of the woods, check out Stubhub.com for availability and the best deals.
Recently gracing the stage as Wicked’s “Wonderful Wizard of Oz,” Lenny Wolpe is making lasting impressions on droves of audiences that are crowding into Broadway’s theaters to see the musical production which has been deemed both enchanting and comedic by many theater critics. Wolpe, who joined the cast in July to replace former Broadway wizard David Garrison, is known for his acting in TV series such as “Baby Talk” and “You’re the One,” as well as making guest appearances in shows such as “E.R.,” “Six Feet Under,” “Ally McBeal” and “The Chapelle Show.” Wolpe has also stared in the Broadway productions of “Little Shop of Horrors,” “Copperfield,” “Into the Light” and “The Drowsy Chaperone.” An American history major at George Washington University, Wolpe joined the theater department as a volunteer in an effort to meet people, he said in Sept. 2006 interview with BroadwayWorld.com.
“ I have always loved musical theatre,” Wolpe said in the interview. “We had very \few musical recordings when I was growing up, but I played them over and over and memorized every word. I think the only cast recording ti Had when I grew up were West Side Story, The Sound of Music and My Fair Lady. I dont’ think that there was any vinyl left on any of them.” Wolpe, who previously finished a run of “The Drowsy Chaperone,” will continue his run in the Broadway production of Wicked until it is up in January 2008. Wicked, which currently has a national tour under way, is playing at theaters in New York, Los Angles, London, Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinatti, Boston, Buffalo, Hartford, Saint Luis and many more. For Wicked tickets at a theater near you, check Stubhub.com.
Dee Roscioli, an Easton, Pennsylvania native who started acting at age 12 and saw her first Broadway musical, Cats, at age 16, has become a fast start in the Broadway original production of “Wicked” based on the book by Gregory MaGuire and the play by Stephen Schwartz. Roscioli, who plays the part of Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, ironically got her initial break on Broadway in the production of Cats as the glamour character Grizabella, according to her fan Web site. The DeSales University theater major played in productions such as “The Music Man” and “Sweeney Todd” during college and got her big break after graduation in 1999 when she won the role of Delia in “Pokemon Live!” which toured nationally. Shortly after, Roscioli won the role of Elphaba in Wicked, which she continues to play in the Chicago production through the shows run into next year.
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“Wicked,” the Broadway musical that sky rocketed off New York’s stages and has been transplanted into theaters across the country - Chicago and Los Angeles to name a few - as well as internationally in London, is doing a knock-up job with its extensive and diverse cast that is on tour through next year and is continuing to receive stunning reviews from critics and audiences - young and old alike. In a review by the Chicago Sun Times, a staff writer gushes: “…the show’s themes - the rewards and trials of friendship, outsiderness vs. popularity, courage in the face of an oppressive system - have struck a deep chord in theatergoers.”
The story, centered in the land of OZ, chronicles the lives of Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good Witch of the East and the unlikely friendship they form while away at sorcery boarding school together. The result turns rotten when the two have a falling out over differences in personality, which is played out hysterically by a cast that mirrors Glinda’s snobby and often petty attitude in contrast to Elphaba’s condescending and mostly cynical attributes. While some may question the appropriateness of this play for children, it has been said by most to be enthralling for all age groups. The whimsical characters are easy to laugh along with and audiences will both laugh and cry at the series of ups and downs the two women go through as they try to find themselves in the far-away land, long before Dorothy ever drops into the picture. For “Wicked” tickets, visit Stubhub.com.
Stephen Schwartz, co-creator of the musical “Wicked,” will open a brand new production Sept. 20 at Dayton, Ohio’s Human Race Theatre Company loft - a show that features old, new and revised songs, according to an Aug. 21 article on Playbill.com. Schwartz, who has gained critical acclaim over the past several years for his long-running and successful show “Wicked” - a spin-off of Gregory MaGuire’s novel that tells the story of how Glinda the Good Witch of the East and Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West met, became friends and eventually tooks sides in the land of Oz, long before Dorothy dropped into the picture.
In his newest prodcution, Schwartz has laid out the story of Sue and Dan, a couple who has been married for thirty years and who is on the verge of breaking up. When Sue decides to leave Dan, she suddenly finds a box of old photographs and as she sorts through them, snippets of their life come to life and are re-enacted in front of audiences. “Snapshots” features the songs “Making Good” and “Popular,” both of which were used in Schwartz’s “Wicked.” Schwartz did, however, write a title namesake song for the new production, which will run through Oct. 7 and be co-presented with the Victoria Theatre Assocation. “Wicked” will continue its run at theaters in Chicago, New York, London and Los Angeles through next year. For “Wicked” tickets at a theater near you, visit Stubhub.com.
Julia Murney, who stars as Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West in the Broadway musical “Wicked,” has recently released an album called “I’m Not Waiting.” The talented actess has starred in the Broadway production of “The Vagina Monologues” and made guest appearances on several TV shows, including “Sex and the City.” She is now making her debut solely as a music artist and said that things have been hectic since she started doing the “Wicked” tour in January since she was on the road for six months before that, according to a July interview by BroadwayBullet.com. It’s also hard not to be exhausted after playing her role as Elphaba, she said. “Wicked has more – she’s just more energetically out there, Elphaba is, and so it just takes so much from the minute you hit stage, and just going, going, going, going, and then running, and changing your clothes, and running, and then going under the stage, and then running up the stairs, and carrying a broom,” Murney said. “It takes a lot. There’s not a lot of — when the shows over, there’s not a lot of: ‘Hey, where we going you guys, we going out?’ It’s like: ‘And goodnight everybody, I’m going home, have some tea.’”
“Wicked” tells the story of Elphaba and Glinda, the Good Witch of the East, and how the two opposite women became unlikely friends at sorcery school and went on to hate each other long before Dorothy dropped into the land of Oz. Based on the novel by Gregory MaGuire and the screenplay of Stephen Schwartz, “Wicked” has caught the attention of thousands of fans and continues to make its way to theaters across the country and worldwide. That phenomenon has been hard to explain for Murney, she said during the Broadway Bullet interview. “The show, for reasons that I don’t think anyone will ever be able to truly discern, caught lightening in a bottle,” Murney said. “And it’s interesting, because it’s not like a show like Beauty and the Beast, which is catered to kids; it’s the kind of a show where the adults are like: “We’re going to see Wicked, should we bring the kids?” And so little ones enjoy it, teenagers enjoy it, because it speaks to anyone who’s ever felt like an outcast or not enough, and then adults — I was just saying earlier, I think that it’s the kind of a show, people — it’s very easy for people to turn around, and make personal.”
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After its three year run, “Wicked” recently became Chicago’s longest running theater production in history. On June 21, the production celebrated its 833rd performance at the Ford Center for Performing Arts and the show is scheduled to run through January 2008. Chicago, which has become an epicenter for the performing arts and many Broadway musicals, continues to attract large crowds for “Wicked,” which grossed more than $1.25 million in the city’s box office to date, according to an article on BroadwayWorld.com. Surpassing the 1996-97 production of “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.”
The Ford Center - which has ornate designs, enormous domed ceilings and expansive surrounding pillars - has also hosted many musicals, such as Ragtime and Cats. With an Arabian-themed architecture, this theater was repaired in the 1990s using money from the Ford Endowment for Performing Arts, giving the venue - once called the Oriental Theatre - its new name. Today it is one of the premier arena for theater productions.
“Wicked” unfolds in the land of Oz and tells the story of an early blossoming childhood friendship between Glinda the Good Witch of the East and Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West. The two, who met long before Dorothy dropped into the picture, are as different as can be and their personalities shine through in animated scenes from this production, which is sure to entertain a broad audience of both young and old alike.
For “Wicked” tickets at a theater near you, visit Stubhub.com.
Universal Studios wrapped up their “Wicked Wednesday” live series in Hollywood last week on Aug. 15, but that doesn’t mean that the production - inspired by the hit Broadway musical that tells the story of the early childhood friendship between Glinda the Good Witch of the East and Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West - will die out anytime soon.
The series, which starred Eden Espinose and Meghan Hilty (two stars from the Los Angeles production that is currently playing at Pantages Theatre), was a chance for fans to see their favorite witches sing several of the musical’s theme pieces and sign autographs, according to NewYorkCity.com.
Throughout the series, which has been running since the beginning of the summer, various cast members from the LA production, including Jane Rubenstein, Julie Reiber and Melissa Fahn, have taken up their roles on Universal Studio’s Blues Brother Stage for an eager audience who enjoyed the original production so much that couldn’t help coming back for more. As the production spans on, until November of this year, many more will have the chance to see the critically acclaimed production and Grammy Award winning cast act out the story, based on the novel by author Greg Maguire and written by Stephen Schwartz and Winne Holzman. For “Wicked” tickets, visit Stubhub.com.