Wicked (theatre)/Fridge

"Boq: Nessa?
 * Fridge Brilliance: Glinda's "The Wicked die alone" is, of course, completely inappropriate - but totally appropriate . This troper guesses that's how Glinda was able to sing it with the straight face.
 * She doesn't know it's a She  behind the curtain, and picks up
 * And it's appropriate for herself: Glinda has reasons to blame herself for  and she's lost everyone she had a real connection to. "The wicked die alone."
 * Similarly, Glinda says "Isn't it nice to know that good will conquer evil. The truth we all believe'll by and by outlive a lie for you and-" She's cut off by an Ozian, indicating that she doesn't really believe the cover story.
 * Glinda also sings, "Let us rejoice-ify that goodness can subdue/the wicked workings of...You-know-who." By the end of the play I realized that she was not singing about Elphaba(whom she didn't regard as wicked), but about.
 * The songs have some excellent examples of Fridge Brilliance as well. It took this troper about fifty times hearing "What is This Feeling" before he realized that "Blonde" actually rhymed with "Respond" from several lines back; ditto for the sneaky extra rhyme snuck into this segment of "Dancing Through Life" (note the italicized words):

Nessa: Yes?

Boq: Uh, Nessa? I've got something to confess, a..."


 * One of the best hidden rhymes, though, is in "Popular". The line "I remind them on their own behalf", which sounds almost like an orphaned line, is actually separated from a sneaky matching rhyme by almost fifteen seconds.
 * Towards the end of "One Short Day," when Glinda sings, "Two best friends," you can hear a little chime that matches "ev'ry little trait" from "What Is This Feeling?" Shout Out for the win!
 * Tiny bit of Les Yay in a similar sequence: The first time we here the tune from "I'm Not That Girl" is at the end of "Popular" when Glinda tells Elphaba that she's beautiful.
 * Over the course of the musical, various phrases involving the word "good" are used -- "making good", "thank goodness", "for goodness' sake", etc. -- and as these phrases are overused by characters who are anything but "good", the word gradually loses all meaning . . . until the end, when the song "For Good" uses it with a different definition from the rest of the show, and it becomes meaningful once again.
 * Fridge Logic: Sorcery has enough of an intellectual foundation that they actually teach classes on it at Crage, yet somehow the field is still so underpopulated that when the Wizard needs talented mage types to help him rule Oz he sends Madame Morrible to a boarding school in order to act as his talent scout.
 * ...Not to mention the fact that he seems to be scouting only at Crage Hall, which might indicate that none of the boys' schools teach sorcery. For some reason.
 * He was searching for amazing power and potential. If a person doesn't have power or potential (ie the Wizard) then all that education is useless. The potential has to be there first. The learning can come later. By searching for students with magical potential, they can find a powerful witch and have a degree of control over her. Don't know about the women thing... Females have babies and therefore have more life-force? Maybe cultural roles make men warriors and women magic-users?
 * I (18-Till-I-Die) hated, hated, hated Wicked. I thought it was canon rape of the purest, most blatant sort and the book struck me as a basically a published Fix Fic. That is...until someone pointed out to me that history is written by the victors. Suddenly I started reading it as a propaganda piece (and not a very good one) written by the Wicked Witch during her regime's latter years, trying to get back at those she felt were "holding her back" all that time. Suddenly every absurd twist of the plot started looking like brilliant parody of the Fix Fic concept. I know, its not. But for me, it basically saved the series from stupidity. If you imagine the whole thing as the Wicked Witch trying and failing to make herself a Villain with Good Publicity, it becomes a brilliantly cutting farce up there with classic spoofs like Airplane! and Hot Shots.
 * Except..."Wicked" is written to be the original, unadulterated version, basically calling the book/movie "Wizard of Oz" the propaganda written from the point-of-view of the winner (the Wizard), since Dorthy had no idea what was going on. --seikueon
 * Or Glinda, if you believe this article. --seikueon, again
 * But if that's the case, what does that make the sequels?