Nytimes

A ‘Wicked’ Tearful Talk With Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande

R.Taylor2 hr ago
"Excuse me," Ariana Grande said, flagging down an imaginary waiter. "May we have one million tissues please?"

It was midway through the fittingly witchy month of October, and Grande and Cynthia Erivo had convened at the Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles to discuss their new film "Wicked," adapted from the long-running Broadway musical. With emotions riding high before its Nov. 22 release, both women teared up frequently while talking about what the movie means to them.

On set, things had been no less emotional. "The tears would fall every single time," Erivo said as she recounted shooting a fraught dance sequence with her co-star. "I didn't have to try for them, they were always there."

"And I'd catch them," Grande added.

"Wicked" functions as a revisionist prequel to "The Wizard of Oz," with the director Jon M. Chu's film following Erivo's green-skinned Elphaba long before she becomes the Wicked Witch of the West. As a young woman at Shiz University, Elphaba is forced to bunk with Grande's Glinda, a rival-turned-friend who plots to make over her outcast roommate during the fizzy musical number "Popular."

But as Elphaba learns the dark secrets that undergird Oz's Emerald City, the disillusioned young witch finally steps into her own power and belts "Defying Gravity," the showstopper that, onstage, is meant to bring down the curtain on the first act. Onscreen, the song serves as the climax of the two-and-a-half-hour movie: The rest of the story is saved for "Wicked Part Two," which was shot in tandem with the first film and is slated for release next November.

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