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Do Witches Melt In Water

Fictional adversary in L. Frank Baum'south children'south book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Fictional character

Wicked Witch of the West
Oz character
The Wizard of Oz Margaret Hamilton Judy Garland 1939.jpg

Margaret Hamilton (left) as the Wicked Witch of the Westward in The Wizard of Oz (1939), threatening Dorothy Gale (Judy Garland)

First appearance The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900)
Created past L. Frank Baum
Portrayed past
  • Margaret Hamilton
    (The Wizard of Oz)
  • Mabel Male monarch
    (The Wiz)
  • Idina Menzel
    (Wicked)
  • Mila Kunis
    (Oz the Neat and Powerful)
  • Rebecca Mader
    (Once Upon a Time)
  • Chandra Currelley-Young
    (Apollo Theater Live Revival)
  • Roseanne Barr
    (Madison Foursquare Garden)
  • Miss Piggy (performed by Eric Jacobson The Muppets Wizard of Oz)
  • Mary J. Blige
    (The Wiz Live)
  • Ana Ularu
    (Emerald Metropolis)
  • Cynthia Erivo
    (Wicked film adaptation)
Voiced past
  • Laraine Newman
    (Tom and Jerry and the Sorcerer of Oz)
  • Riki Lindhome
    (The Lego Batman Movie)
In-universe information
Allonym
  • Momba (1910)
    (The Wonderful Magician of Oz)
  • Mombi (1914)
    (His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz)
  • Bastinda (1939)
    (The Sorcerer of the Emerald Urban center)
  • Smarmy (1969)
    (The Songs from The Wizard of Oz)
  • Evillene (1974)
    (The Wiz)
  • Elphaba Thropp (1995)
    (Wicked)
  • One-time Snarl-Spats (2000)
    (The Unknown Witches of Oz)
  • Mordra (2005)
    (The Living House of Oz)
  • Chester (2007)
    (The Wonderful Wizard of Ha's)
  • Azkadellia (2007)
    (Tin can Human)
  • Billie Westbrook (2011)
    (Dorothy and the Witches of Oz)
  • Theodora (2013)
    (Oz the Bully and Powerful)
  • Lynessa (2013)
    (Grimm Fairy Tales presents Oz)
  • Zelena (2014)
    (Once Upon a Fourth dimension)
  • Pyrena (2017)
    (The Wicked Sorcerer of Oz)
  • Westward (2017)
    (Emerald City)
  • Morella (2019)
    (How the Sorcerer Came to Oz)
Species Human (witch)
Gender Female
Title The Wicked Witch of the Westward
Occupation Ruler of the Winkies
(at time of death)
Family The Wicked Witch of the Due east (sister, but in The Wonderful Magician of Oz and the medias based after it)
Wicked: Governess of Munchkinland (mother), Wizard of Oz (father)
Once Upon A Time: Regina Mills (one-half-sister), Cora (female parent), Robin (daughter), Henry Mills (nephew), Alice (probable daughter in constabulary), Hades (former boyfriend)
Nationality Ozian of Winkie descent
Role Adversary

The Wicked Witch of the West is a fictional graphic symbol who appears in the archetype children's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), created past American writer Fifty. Frank Baum. In Baum's subsequent Oz novels, it is the Nome King who is the primary villain; the Wicked Witch of the West is rarely even referred to once more after her death in the first book.

The witch's most pop delineation was in the classic 1939 film based on Baum'south novel, where she was portrayed by Margaret Hamilton. Hamilton's characterization introduced green pare and this has been connected in subsequently literary and dramatic representations, including Gregory Maguire's revisionist Oz novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (1995) and its musical stage adaptation Wicked (2003), the 2013 picture show Oz the Great and Powerful, and the tv set series One time Upon a Time and Emerald City.

In Baum'due south books [edit]

The Wicked Witch of the West is the malevolent ruler of the Winkie Land. Her castle is described equally cute instead of beingness the sinister fortress shown in the flick. In all versions, she is seriously aquaphobic. The Wicked Witch of the West was not related to the Wicked Witch of the Eastward, but leagued together with her, the Wicked Witch of the South, and the Wicked Witch of the North to conquer the Land of Oz and divide it amongst themselves, as recounted in 50. Frank Baum'south Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz. She shows no interest in the death of the Eastern Witch and all she cares virtually is obtaining the Argent Shoes which volition increase her power. W. W. Denslow's illustrations for The Wonderful Magician of Oz depict her as a paunched old hag with iii pigtails and an eyepatch. Baum himself specified that she only had one middle, but that it "was as powerful equally a telescope", enabling the witch to see what was happening in her kingdom from her castle windows. Other illustrators, such as Paul Granger, placed her eye in the center of her forehead, as a cyclops. Unremarkably, she is shown wearing an eyepatch, however, some illustrations evidence her with two eyes.

Nigh of her ability resides in the creatures she controls. She has a pack of xl corking wolves, a swarm of black bees, a flock of 40 crows, and an army of Winkies.[i] She possesses the enchanted Golden Cap, which compels the winged monkeys to obey her on three occasions. First, the witch allowable the creatures to help her enslave the Winkies and to seize control of the western function of the State of Oz. Second, she made the winged monkeys drive Oz out of the Winkie Land, when he attempted to overthrow her.

When Dorothy Gale and her companions were sent by the Magician to destroy her, the Witch attacked them with her various creatures. Each of these attempts was thwarted, but the protagonists are eventually subdued by the Witch's third and concluding permitted employ of the winged monkeys. Even so, the former witch cannot kill Dorothy because the daughter is protected by the Good Witch of the Due north'south kiss. She, therefore, settles for enslaving Dorothy, and tries to force the Cowardly Panthera leo into submission by starving him, though Dorothy sneaks him nutrient. Upon seeing the Silver Shoes on the girl'due south feet, the Wicked Witch decides to steal them, and thereby learn fifty-fifty more than power.

When she succeeds in acquiring i silver shoe by making Dorothy trip over an invisible bar, the little girl angrily throws a saucepan of h2o onto the Wicked Witch. This causes the old witch to melt away. The Wicked Witch'southward dryness was enumerated in some clues before this. Furthermore, when Toto had bitten her, she had not bled; her wickedness had dried her upwards long ago. Unfortunately, L. Frank Baum did non explain precisely why water had this upshot on her, nor did he ever imply that all evil witches could be likewise destroyed. However, the wicked witch Mombi is similarly disposed of in The Lost Male monarch of Oz and the wicked witch Singra is clearly afraid of the same fate in the early on capacity of The Wicked Witch of Oz.

Personality [edit]

The Witch did not carry a broom in the novel, but rather an umbrella, which she uses on ane occasion to strike Dorothy's dog Toto.[2] Her nature is a volatile and yet somewhat cowardly one. Despite her immense power, she avoids contiguous contact with her enemies, and is frightened of Dorothy at first when she sees the girl wearing the Silver Shoes. She is as well afraid of the dark in Baum's original story for reasons unknown. For that reason, the Witch never tried to steal the Silver Shoes while Dorothy was sleeping. Despite her fear of water and the dark, the Wicked Witch of the West was one of the about powerful witches in all of Oz.[ citation needed ] In ensuing Oz books, her power is described every bit having been so great that fifty-fifty Glinda the Expert Witch of the S feared her.[ citation needed ]

In other books [edit]

  • In Alexander Melentyevich Volkov'southward 1939 novel The Sorcerer of the Emerald Metropolis, her given name is Bastinda. March Laumer uses this name for the witch in his novel Aunt Em and Uncle Henry in Oz. Similar in the 1939 pic, she is the sister of the Wicked Witch of the East. Sherwood Smith uses this name for a new Wicked Witch of the West in her 2005 book The Emerald Wand of Oz.
  • Gregory Maguire'south September 1995 revisionist novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the W takes the familiar Oz story and inverts information technology, with the Wicked Witch (given the name Elphaba in homage to L. Frank Baum) equally the novel's protagonist and Dorothy as a hapless child. The name is retained in the musical Wicked.
  • In the novel The Unknown Witches of Oz, the Wicked Witch of the West is named Old Snarl-Spats.
  • In Dorothy of Oz, the Wicked Witch of the W's ghost appeared. When Princess Gaylette'due south Jester gets his manus on the Wicked Witch of the West's wand, he gets possessed past the Wicked Witch of the West's ghost. When Dorothy starts to do a flim-flam to fool the Jester that Glinda is in china doll class, the Wicked Witch of the West's ghost continues to warn the Jester of Dorothy'southward trick. When the Jester gives the Wicked Witch of the West's wand to Dorothy, the Wicked Witch of the Due west's ghost disappears. It was also mentioned in this story that Wicked Witch of the Due west once cast a curse on the Gillikin Country town of Purplefield where it was turned into a maze that causes anyone who fails to make information technology through to disappear. Her curse on Purplefield was undone when Dorothy, Scarecrow, Tin Human being, and Cowardly Lion made it through the maze past hearing Tugg'south foghorn.
  • In the comic book series Grimm Fairy Tales Presents Oz, the Wicked Witch of the Due west is named Lynessa.
  • In the novel The Living House of Oz there is a witch named Mordra who comes from an alternate Oz, simply looks identical to the Wicked Witch of the West who lived in the regular Oz.
  • In Cheshire Crossing afterward reforming years after beingness melted by Dorothy, the Wicked Witch of the Due west, also known every bit Miss West, confronts her aslope Alice Liddell and Wendy Darling, becoming centrolineal and romantically involved with Captain James Claw.
  • In the graphic novel adaptation of How the Wizard Came to Oz, the Wicked Witch of the West is named Morella.
  • In the 2021 novel Oscar Diggs, The Magician of Oz, the Witch of the West is named Theodora, the aforementioned proper noun used in the film Oz the Bully and Powerful.

In dramatic representations [edit]

1910 film [edit]

The 1910 silent film The Wonderful Wizard of Oz features a character similar to the Wicked Witch of the W, identified in intertitles as "Momba the Witch" (Compare the character Mombi from The Marvelous Land of Oz). In the film, Momba has an unspecified hold over the Magician, who promises his crown to anyone who tin release him from Momba'south power. Momba captures Dorothy and her companions, evoking the events in Baum'south original novel, and is destroyed when Dorothy throws a bucket of h2o over her.

1914 picture [edit]

Mombi's likeness and costume in the 1914 silent film, His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz is based on Denslow'due south illustrations of the Wicked Witch of the W.

1939 pic [edit]

In the 1939 version of The Magician of Oz, Margaret Hamilton plays the Wicked Witch of the West as a greenish-skinned witch dressed in a long black dress with a blackness pointed lid. She does not wear an eye-patch like in the novel. This representation of the Wicked Witch has become a standard for what witches resemble and an archetype of human wickedness.[three] While the relationship is not mentioned in Baum's books, in the movie, the Witch is the sister of the Wicked Witch of the East. The flick makes her even more than of a primary antagonist, and consequently, she appears in the picture show much earlier (and more often), than in Baum's original novel. She demands the Munchkins reveal who killed her sister, not long later Dorothy'southward inflow in Oz. She is described by Glinda the Good Witch of the N, non the South as in the book, as "worse than the other i". She actively seeks revenge against Dorothy for killing her sister, fifty-fifty though it was "accidental". However, as soon as the Witch is reminded of the scarlet slippers, all interest in her sister'south expiry vanishes and all she cares about is obtaining her slippers, which will enable her to conquer Oz. She is more menacing than her literary analogue, making Dorothy too afraid to ever lose her temper with the Witch. She makes sure that Dorothy knows her power when Dorothy meets the Scarecrow by throwing a brawl of fire at them. Before Dorothy and her friends get to the metropolis, the Witch casts a sleeping spell over a field of poppies through which the group must pass. Glinda remotely counteracts the spell with snow. The Wicked Witch so flies on her broom over the Emerald Metropolis, demanding that the citizens of the Emerald City surrender Dorothy to her, and the Wizard demands the destruction of the Witch, with her broom equally proof, in exchange for granting the wishes of Dorothy and her companions. Dissimilar Baum's original delineation, the Wicked Witch sends the Winged Monkeys as the first wave of attack. The Golden Cap is not mentioned but, after the failure of her poppy spell, the Witch does concur and then angrily cast away a costume piece that could be considered the cap (Information technology profoundly resembles the Cap as depicted in West. West. Denslow's original illustrations for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz) and was mentioned equally her "wishing cap" in the original shooting script. She is killed when Dorothy throws a saucepan of water on her, in attempt to put out a fire the witch bestowed on the Scarecrow. In the novel, Dorothy simply throws it on her in a fit of acrimony. There is no prior mention of the Wicked Witch's vulnerability to water in the motion picture, save for a separate-second before the water actually douses her when she screams "Don't throw that water!" (this line does non appear in the picture's shooting script). After the Wicked Witch of the West is dead, her soldiers are glad to be complimentary of her ability, and quote "Hail to Dorothy! The Wicked Witch is dead!" The character ranks No. 4 in the American Picture Institute'due south list of the 50 All-time Movie Villains of All Time aslope Darth Vader, Norman Bates, and Hannibal Lecter,[4] making her the highest ranking female villain, every bit well equally placing 90th on Empire magazine's 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Fourth dimension.[v]

Hamilton'south other part in this film is the Witch's Kansas sepia tone counterpart, Miss Almira Gulch, newly created for the motion-picture show by screenwriter Noel Langley. She is a socialite who owns half the county. She arrives on her cycle at the farm and says to Uncle Henry: "Mr. Gale! I'd like to speak with yous and your wife right abroad almost Dorothy!" Dorothy's domestic dog, Toto, has bitten her leg, and she wants to accept him to the sheriff and make sure he's destroyed. Dorothy calls her "a wicked erstwhile witch." Miss Gulch takes Toto abroad in her basket, only he escapes. In the tornado scene, Dorothy sees Miss Gulch on her bicycle transform into a Wicked Witch, flying on her broom.

Gale Sondergaard was originally bandage as the Wicked Witch of the West, but withdrew from the office when the witch's persona shifted from sly and glamorous (thought to emulate the Evil Queen in Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) to the familiar "ugly hag".[6]

Hamilton's other appearances (including on Sesame Street) [edit]

On a 1976 episode of the American children's TV show Sesame Street, the Witch, once once more played by Hamilton, drops her broom and falls onto the street. Big Bird and a Sesame Street resident, David, have the broom and reject to requite it back considering of her nasty and disrespectful attitude (Oscar the Grouch is the only Sesame Street resident who finds her pleasant; he even develops a vanquish on her). Enraged, the Wicked Witch threatens to turn them into a plume duster and a basketball, respectively, unless they comply with her wishes; she too makes it pelting inside of Mr. Hooper's store as an intimidation tactic. Realizing that threats and intimidation accept failed to yield the desired effect, she resorts to trickery, disguising herself equally a sweet erstwhile lady in an effort to steal the broom dorsum. David turns the tables on her by willingly giving it back afterwards talking her into asking for information technology politely and with respect. Unfortunately, she does not learn the lesson almost being nice and heads home on discourteous terms with the locals (except, possibly, for Large Bird, who says he will miss her considering the events of the episode were an exciting modify). The Wicked Witch drops accidentally drops the broom over again while showing off on her flight dwelling house, and David, again in possession of it, laments his prediction that the whole ordeal will at present repeat itself.

This episode received a very negative reception. Afterward it was aired, the Children'due south Goggle box Workshop (CTW) and series creators Joan Ganz Cooney and Lloyd Morrisett received numerous letters from parents, who complained that the Wicked Witch was too scary for their children, using phrases such as "screams and tears" and "the threat of the witch'south power remains in children's eyes." Every bit a result of these complaints, Anna Herera, of the CTW Research Department, told the creators of Sesame Street to non re-air the episode. The episode was leaked anonymously on June 18, 2022.

The Museum of the Moving Prototype in New York City screened part of the Wicked Witch episode on November 24, 2019, as part of a "Lost and Constitute" consequence that celebrated the 50th anniversary of Sesame Street. Information technology was accompanied by many other clips, including the unaired episode "Snuffy's Parents Become a Divorce", along with a discussion panel with Jim Henson Legacy president Craig Shemin, former Sesame Street head writer Norman Stiles, and Sesame Workshop'due south Rosemarie Truglio.

Hamilton besides played the Wicked Witch of the Due west in The Paul Lynde Halloween Special (1976), and reprised her role several times on stage, about notably at the St. Louis Municipal Opera.

Hamilton besides appeared as herself on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 3 times between 1975 and 1976. In these appearances, she demonstrated how her costume and acting skills made her announced to exist the Witch, and bodacious her young viewers that in that location was nothing almost her to be feared, considering her portrayal in the film was but make-believe.[seven]

Wicked [edit]

The story line of the stage adaptation "goes far afield" from the 1995 novel. As Winnie Holzman observed in an interview with Playbill, "It was [Maguire's] vivid idea to take this hated effigy and tell things from her point of view, and to have the two witches exist roommates in college, but the way in which their friendship develops – and really the whole plot – is different onstage."[8] Schwartz justified the departure, saying "Primarily we were interested in the relationship betwixt Galinda – who becomes Glinda – and Elphaba...the friendship of these 2 women and how their characters lead them to completely dissimilar destinies."[9] In add-on to this change in focus, other major plot modifications include Fiyero's appearance as the scarecrow, Elphaba's survival at the end, Nessarose using a wheelchair instead of existence born without arms, Boq having a continuing love interest for Glinda – and eventually becoming the Tin Woodman instead of Nick Chopper, the complete cutting of Elphaba's years in the Vinkus, the deletion of Liir's nativity, Fiyero not having a wife and children, and Doctor Dillamond not being murdered.[x]

Oz the Great and Powerful [edit]

Mila Kunis portrays the Wicked Witch of the West, who is named Theodora, in the 2013 Disney film Oz the Great and Powerful. In this version, she is portrayed equally a 'adept witch' and as the younger sis of Evanora (Rachel Weisz), who is at state of war with Glinda (Michelle Williams) for control of Oz; Theodora wants nothing more than for peace to come dorsum to their land. She falls in love with Oscar Diggs (James Franco), but her feelings for him are ane-sided; Theodora wants to be Oscar'south queen when he rules Oz. Later Oscar goes to run into with Glinda, Evanora convinces Theodora that Oscar had betrayed her, offering her a magic apple that will assistance Theodora forget her disappointment. Theodora immediately takes a bite from it, but she realizes too tardily that Evanora had deceived her. Before Theodora can exercise annihilation, she starts feeling great hurting and delirium, every bit the apple, tainted with dark magic causes her heart to wither. Her skin turns green as a side effect of the magic, while her nose becomes crooked due to her falling on it. Though Evanora offers to cover upwards Theodora'due south new advent with an enchantment, Theodora embraces her new appearance and helps her sis attempt to kill Glinda, get revenge on Oscar, and take control of Oz. However, she and Evanora are defeated past Oscar's illusions. Theodora is forced to flee the metropolis on her broom, merely she threatens to return. Oscar tells her he knows her wickedness isn't her doing and, if she ever finds the goodness inside her, she is welcome to return. However, she refuses and flies off to the Westward (at this bespeak now officially commencement her reign as The Wicked Witch Of The W), vowing revenge.

In one case Upon a Fourth dimension [edit]

The Wicked Witch appears as the principal antagonist of the second half of Flavour Iii of In one case Upon a Time, played by Rebecca Mader.[11] This version goes by the proper noun of Zelena (which means "green" in some Slavic languages). Zelena is discovered to be the girl of the Queen of Hearts/the Miller'south Daughter/Cora (Barbara Hershey/Rose McGowan), making her the older, long-lost half-sister of Regina the Evil Queen (Lana Parrilla). Zelena visited Rumplestiltskin (Robert Carlyle) and learned from him how to command her own powerful magic. Her storyline revolves around her efforts to create a time-travel spell that will allow her to go dorsum and prevent the nascence of Snow White'southward female parent, Ava, who informed Prince Leopold (Cora'south fiancé) that Cora was with child to sabotage Cora'due south attempts to infiltrate the majestic family (before she can ruin Zelena's life), and thus Zelena would exist raised as royalty. But despite Zelena's efforts to create the deadly time portal Emma Swan (supposedly the merely wielder of light magic powerful enough to oppose her) her plans are halted when the Evil Queen masters light magic in time to oppose her (although her time-travel spell is completed, it takes effect after her presumed death, transporting Emma and Captain Hook (Colin O'Donoghue) dorsum to earlier the original curse was cast). She was afterwards thought to take been killed past Rumplestiltskin.

It was later discovered that Zelena's soul actually went back in time, where she managed to revive herself and assumed Maid Marian's (Christie Laing) place afterwards killing her in the by and taking her appearance; to allow the heroes to take her back to the present, where she poses as Marian without Robin Hood (Sean Maguire) knowing. This way, she tin resume making Regina Mills suffer by complicating her romantic relationship with the believed widower Robin. Zelena also copies the other villains' idea to endeavour to force the Author to write them happy lives at the expense of the heroes. Zelena swaps out the Elixir of the Wounded Centre and when Mr. Gold (Rumplestiltskin) is dying, saves his life with it, but only after he agrees to drib his grudge against her and begins helping her. Regina is informed of this by Rumplestiltskin himself and rushes to New York with Emma. Upon arriving there with Lily, Emma and Regina face Robin Hood. Fifty-fifty though Robin Hood is now enlightened of what happened to Maid Marian, he couldn't leave Zelena because she is pregnant. Zelena is taken dorsum to Storybrooke and locked in the hospital basement'due south aviary. Regina almost has the Author write Zelena and the pregnancy out of being and memory. Regina changes her mind later on she realizes it is something their mother would do, and she can cull to exist happy with Robin and the residuum of her family, raising the baby herself afterward the birth. When the Author warps reality to serve his own purposes, the roles of heroes and villains are switched. In the alternate Enchanted Forest Zelena is the fiancé of Robin Hood and their marriage volition brand all the changes permanent. When Regina is slashed near fatally past Rumplestiltskin, Zelena complains she is haemorrhage on her wedding dress and taking the attention abroad from her on her wedding day. She begins turning dark-green again and runs off. When reality is returned to normal she is even so pregnant in the hospital.

Zelena travels with the heroes to Camelot in search of Emma after she becomes the Night One to save Regina from the same fate. She is told to pretend to be Regina's mute handmaiden (Regina having taken her vocalization). In Camelot, Zelena is threatened by Regina that her baby will be taken by Regina in one case it has been built-in. She afterwards kidnaps Mary Margaret (Ginnifer Goodwin) equally the rest of the group tries to sneak into Camelot (having been thrown out) and regains her magic with King Arthur'due south (Liam Garrigan) assistance. She enchants the main hilt of Excalibur to bind Merlin's (Elliot Knight) soul, allowing its holder to control him. Zelena, Arthur and Merlin hold Emma'due south friends captive with the Protheum flame and the Dark One Dagger as ransom. Before she can do anything, she is tricked by Emma and tied by magic around a tree. Subsequently a battle betwixt Merlin and Emma, Zelena transports herself and Arthur back to Camelot. Arthur and Zelena plan to take a magical helm from the kingdom of DunBroch. After many failed attempts to attain the captain, including a battle between Arthur, Zelena and Blood-red Riding Hood (Meghan Ory), Mulan (Jamie Chung) and Merida (Amy Manson, she transports herself back to Camelot, where Emma casts the Nighttime Curse, ripping everyone dorsum to Storybrooke without their memories of ever stepping foot in Camelot.

Zelena awakens in Granny'south Diner and is almost immediately put back in her cell. Zelena is met by the Dark Swan (name for Emma equally the Dark I) and is told she will need an ally in the town subsequently people acquire the truth. Zelena eats darkly enchanted onion rings (made by Emma) and every bit a consequence, her pregnancy is sped upwards from two months to nine. She gives nascence to a infant daughter and is taken away past Emma into her basement with Hook at her side. She is freed from her cuff in one case again by Hook and leaves Hook in Emma'due south house, wanting to go answers. Zelena steps back inside after Emma finds him. She brings in an enchanted dreamcatcher, which holds the memories of Hook condign a Nighttime One (in Emma's fault) in order to save him. Zelena learns that Robin and Regina are allowing her to see her infant, every bit long as 1 of them is with her. This is when she shares a bonding moment with her child. During the Dark Siege of Storybrooke, Zelena plans to take Regina's place in Storybrooke including her office. After claiming full custody of her infant, Zelena is transported by Regina (using the Amateur's Wand) back to Oz, and she claimed they will see each other once again.[12]

On Zelena's return to Oz, she confronts Dorothy, who is currently in possession of the silver slippers which can transport her to any realm. She holds Dorothy'southward domestic dog, Toto, hostage in substitution for the shoes. Dorothy tries to knock Zelena out with poppy powder, but before she does, Zelena puts her nether a sleeping curse. At present in possession of the argent slippers, she goes back to Storybrooke and assumes the class of the Blueish Fairy to trick Belle into giving her back her girl, who is residing at the convent with the fairies. During their chat, a portal to the Underworld appears and Belle, holding the baby, goes through it. In a desperate effort not to lose her daughter over again, Zelena jumps through it. However, due to a sprained ankle and her macerated magic in the Underworld, Zelena is helpless as Belle runs abroad with her daughter. Regina reunites with Zelena in the underworld where it is revealed that Zelena and Hades have a romantic history. The sisters somewhen get shut as she tries to change for her daughter. She shares True Dearest'south Buss with Hades, which allows him to go to Storybrooke and the ii get together with the baby equally she believes Hades has changed. Even so, Hades kills Robin Hood, proving his evil to Zelena who kills him with the Olympian Crystal. She names the baby Robin later her father.

In flavor 6, Zelena and Regina go into a fight where Regina reveals that she blames Zelena for Robin'south death; Regina'due south dark half, the Evil Queen has now get a human being manifestation and she and Zelena work together until the Queen tries to kill her. Regina saves Zelena from the Evil Queen but does not forgive her for Robin'southward expiry. Later in the series, the town is threatened by Rumplestiltskin'southward mother, the Blackness Fairy. Zelena goes into the mines to confront her, but is held back by Regina, who does not trust her to have care of the situation. The Blackness Fairy takes control of the unstable magic Zelena uses to attack the fairy, and uses it to fuel crystals with nighttime magic. Regina takes her frustration out on Zelena afterwards they exit the mines, and tells her to go back to Oz. In a distressed state, Zelena takes the Apprentice'southward wand and creates a portal to Oz, but instead of going though, she retrieves a magical artefact and uses it to take away her magic, which removes the dark magic fuelling the crystals, therefore ruining the Black Fairy's plans.

After the Black Fairy's dark curse is broken, Zelena remains in Storybrooke and raises Robin. Zelena somewhen regains her magic after a confrontation betwixt herself, Robin, Mother Gothel and Helm Claw.

Emerald Urban center [edit]

The Witch of the Due west appears every bit one of the main characters in the telly series Emerald Metropolis, portrayed by Ana Ularu. Hither she is one of the concluding Cardinal Witches of Oz and the "Mistress of the Western Fields, Vessel of Truth and Solace", along with her sisters Glinda of the North and the Witch of the East. West seemingly obeys the Wizard of Oz'due south law against magic, owns a brothel in the Emerald City and is a poppy opium addict, deteriorating her magical skill. She is very emotional, especially when compared to the reserved beliefs of Glinda's. Despite claiming to hate magic because it could not save her mother and sister witches during the Animate being Forever'southward final set on, she resorts to it rapidly when in pursuit of Dorothy subsequently she accidentally killed East.

Modest Roles in Other Adaptations [edit]

  • On the 1969 LP vinyl Songs from the Sorcerer of Oz, produced by Disneyland records, there is a song sung by a witch named Smarmy (voiced by vocaliser Ballad Lombard) entitled "Just Call Smarmy." While some presume that she is The Wicked Witch of the West, she is in fact some other evil witch from another Disney/Oz story, "The Cowardly Lion of Oz" which was produced for Disneyland records in 1969 as well. This song, along with others from Disney Oz musical story albums comprises this disk.
  • In The Wiz (1974), its picture show version (1978), and television special (2015), the Wicked Witch of the West is given the name Evillene (portrayed past Mabel King in both the original Broadway bandage and the pic, and Mary J. Blige in the television set special). She is the malevolent ruler of the Winkies. She is the sister of Addaperle (Miss 1 in the pic version), Glinda, and Evermean, the other 3 witches of Oz. In the flick version, she runs a sweatshop under Yankee Stadium with the slogan "Manufacturers and Exporters of Sweat" and extracts it not only from the Winkies, but the Crows, the Poppy Girls, and the Subway Peddler. Her magic creates urban variations on the Kalidahs (depicted as evil growing dolls sent past the Subway Peddler), Fighting Copse (depicted as mobile pillars) and the wolves (depicted as living and carnivorous trash cans), all in the Subway system. She then sends the Flight Monkeys (depicted as a biker gang) to capture Dorothy and her friends. In the film, Evillene is vanquished when Dorothy sets off the sweatshop'southward sprinkler arrangement, thus ending her reign over the Winkies.
  • In Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo 's 1981 episode "Scooby's Trip to Ahz", the Witch appears as the Wicked Witch of the North by Southeast (suffix name spoofs the film title "Due north by Northwest").
  • In the anime picture show The Magician of Oz (1982), the Witch (voiced by Elizabeth Hanna) is purple-skinned, white-haired, and wears an eyepatch similar to W. W. Denslow's original illustration. However, her scope eye is replaced by a magic mirror. Her soldiers are completely magical, disappear at her demise, and are quite singled-out from the Winkies, whom she uses only for labor. She wears an old-fashioned peasant apparel and possesses a staff, through which she generates her magic.
  • In the 1986 anime series The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Witch is majestic-skinned once again, and has long white hair with a blood-like red streak. She possesses both eyes and is dressed in a long, black hooded gown. Her eyes accept the power to turn people into stone, and plow blood-red when such transformations are effected. One of the Winkies really tries to crush her to death with a huge boulder, but the Witch causes the boulder to disappear, and turns the man into rock. Similar in the 1982 anime flick, a magic mirror shows her everything she wishes to uncover. The Wicked Witch makes it clear to Dorothy that the Expert Witch of the Northward's kiss cannot serve as protection from her apparently superior power, and it'south the Silver Shoes that safeguard the girl. The Witch besides reveals that the Wicked Witch of the East was her sister, and that the Argent Shoes could triple her ain powers. This version gives the witch the most prolonged and dramatic death scene of all versions; it also differs from previous adaptations by suggesting that Mombi was her protégé.
  • In the animated series The Wizard of Oz (1990–1991) past DiC Enterprises, the Flight Monkeys that were loyal to the Wicked Witch of the West (voiced by Tress MacNeille) perform a ritual that resurrects the Wicked Witch of the West where they place her lid, dress and cloak on an effigy. Afterwards, she terrorizes Oz again by tarnishing the Emerald City, stealing what Dorothy'due south friends treasure the well-nigh (the Scarecrow's brain diploma, the Tin Woodman'due south clock centre, and the Cowardly King of beasts'southward medal of backbone), and making the Wizard fly off-class in his gasbag balloon by creating an evil wind. Of course she still has a weakness to any type of water causing her to evade at all times. This incarnation of the character was conspicuously based on the 1939 MGM movie, to which the series itself served as an unofficial sequel. Although the witch's garments are purple hither rather than black.
  • The Witch appears in a niggling-known 1995 version of the original story made for British cable television, which combined elements of Baum's original story, the 1939 motion picture, and the 1985 semi-sequel Return to Oz. She first appears after Dorothy lands in Oz, demands to know where the Cerise Slippers are, threatens Dorothy, then leaves. The Munchkins then reveal they hid the Slippers to keep the Witch from getting them, strength them onto Dorothy, who so leaves to find the Wizard. At the end of the picture show, after taking the Slippers while Dorothy is sleeping, the Witch turns her loose in a room total of large rocks, says she'due south turned Dorothy's companions into rocks themselves, and will give her three chances to selection which ones are her friends, but if she guesses wrong, she volition become one herself. To be fair, she turns the Slippers into a rock and hides them in the room. Dorothy, however manages to find the Tin Woodman, Scarecrow and Cowardly Lion. The Witch, enraged, grows to giant sized and holds a boulder over Dorothy, who then finds the Slippers and wishes for the Witch to lose her power. The Witch loses her strength and falls backwards, and the bedrock kills her instantly.
  • In the 1995 television special The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come up True (a stage musical based on the 1939 motion picture), Debra Winger portrays the Witch. Her costume is light-green rather than black. In addition, Winger narrates the tornado scene including Miss Gulch's transformation. This production omits the scene where the Witch threatens Dorothy, the Scarecrow, and Tin Homo every bit mattresses and a beehive after actualization on top of The Tin Human's cottage. The Wicked Witch'due south Castle scenes are shortened due to fourth dimension limit. Different Margaret Hamilton, Winger says the line "What a little whiner! I'll requite you something to cry about" when Dorothy suffers her imprisonment after Aunt Em'due south image fades abroad in the crystal brawl rather than "I'll give you Auntie Em, my pretty!".
  • In the February 1996 episode "Water You Thinking?" of Mighty Morphin' Alien Rangers, a witch monster appears past the proper noun of Witchblade and she seems to exist modeled subsequently the Wicked Witch. Her voice and cackle are reminiscent of the 1939 moving-picture show'due south portrayal of the Witch. Additionally, nigh of her lines are paraphrasings of the Witch's lines, such as "How 'tour a fiddling burn, Rangers?". She also refers to the Rangers' Zords as "Tin Men" and to the Rangers as "My pretties". When she's defeated, she cries "Oh, no! I'm falling, falling! What a globe!"
  • In "Album of Interest II", a 2002 episode of the blithe television series Futurama, Leela is knocked unconscious and dreams almost being Dorothy in a version of The Sorcerer of Oz, with Futurama characters playing the roles of Wizard characters. While Fry is the Scarecrow, Bough the Robot is the Tinman, and Dr. Zoidberg is the Lion, the Wicked Witch is played by Mom, a recurring antagonist from the testify, voice by Tress MacNeille who as well provided the voice for The Wicked Witch of the West in the 1990 DIC blithe series. The Witch sends her flying monkeys, played by Mom'southward sons Larry, Walt, and Igner, to capture Dorothy/Leela. At the Witch's castle, she reveals that she wants to adopt Dorothy as her daughter, and Dorothy/Leela agrees, equally long as she gets to be a witch, too. The Witch/Mom meets her fate when Tinman/Bough opens a celebratory bottle of champagne and accidentally sprays her with it, melting her. After, after Dorothy/Leela uses the power of her carmine boots to become the new Wicked Witch of the West, h2o splashes down on her from the ceiling, causing her to melt as well, to which the Cowardly Lobster/Zoidberg descends the stairs, mentioning "I think there's a problem with your upstairs toilet."
  • In The Muppets' Wizard of Oz (2005), Miss Piggy plays all of the witches of Oz, including the Wicked Witch of the Westward. Her bones attire evoked West. W. Denslow's original illustration, with a biker theme. The eyepatch also covered a magical glass-eye that gave her visual powers. This version of the Wicked Witch is only vulnerable to tap water where she is able to bathe in bottled water. The Wicked Witch of the West is vanquished when Dorothy kicks her into the bathtub filled with bottled tap water since Angel Marie filled the bottles with tap h2o. Afterwards, Dorothy salvages her glass-eye which is later given to the Wizard of Oz. Miss Piggy's other role is herself. Prior to Dorothy's journey, she appears with Kermit and tries to go rid of Dorothy. After Dorothy's return, she returns for the Muppets' testify.
  • In the Oct 2007 VeggieTales episode "The Wonderful Wizard of Ha's", the witch and her Kansas counterpart from the 1939 film are replaced by Bobby the Peachy (Kansas) and Chester the Bully (Wonderful Land of Ha's), both portrayed by Gourdon from "Bully Trouble".
  • In the December 2007 Syfy miniseries Tin Man, the grapheme of Azkadellia (played by Kathleen Robertson) is analogous with the Wicked Witch of the Due west, though she is vastly different from most other versions of the character. In the miniseries, she is portrayed as a member of the Royal Family of the O.Z. (Outer Zone) who is possessed every bit a young girl by the spirit of the evil Witch of the Dark (Karin Konoval) who uses her torso to take over the O.Z. and plunge it into a earth of permanent darkness. This adaptation's version of Dorothy Gale is Azkadellia'south younger sister DG (Zooey Deschanel). Both of the sisters are powerful witches themselves, though DG has to relearn all of her magical abilities, and once DG frees Azkadellia from the witch'southward grip, both of them defeat her together. Although it is clear that Azkadellia is analogous with the Wicked Witch of the West, it is implied vaguely that the Witch of the Dark is the Wicked Witch that Dorothy, who makes an advent as a spirit in a mausoleum, defeated in the original story.
  • In Dorothy of Oz, a Korean manhwa (produced 2008 or earlier) past Son Hee-Joon, the Witch of the Due west is re-imagined as a scientist who rules over the Western Dominion. She is psychopathic and roughshod, and in a twist, she (not Mara/Dorothy) is the true orchestrator of the decease of the East Witch Selluriah. She is the creator of an regular army of clones, one of whom is the story'due south equivalent of the Scarecrow. Whether or not this is a reference to the musical Wicked is unknown.
  • The Wicked Witch of the West appears equally the primary adversary of the 2011 television miniseries Dorothy and the Witches of Oz, played past Eliza Swenson. In flashbacks, it was seen that she had obtained the mystical Book of Bini Aru (which contained the Changing Word) from the Wizard equally part of a bargain not to continue her attack on Oz in substitution that the Wizard doesn't plan to reclaim the book. Unfortunately for the Wicked Witch of the West, the Wizard entrusted the key to the Volume of Bini Aru to Dorothy for safekeeping. On Earth, she assumes the class of a female person volume publishing agent named Billie Westbrook and plans to obtain key from Dorothy so that she tin lead Princess Langwidere, the Nome King and an regular army of winged monkeys, Nomes, and dragons into taking over Earth upon learning the Irresolute Give-and-take. The Wicked Witch of the Due west too had plans to invade Wonderland, Neverland, Camelot, Narnia, and Shangri-La.
  • The Wicked Witch of the Due west has a cameo appearance in Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return during one of the Jester's songs. The Jester is presented every bit her brother who was cursed to be trapped in a jester's costume by the Witch with Glinda noting that she didn't know the Witch had a sense of humor.
  • The Wicked Witch of the West appears as a boss character and playable figure in the video game Lego Dimensions, voiced by Courtenay Taylor. She is the simply playable character from the Wizard of Oz franchise. During the video game's story, she is the boss in the starting time level "Follow the LEGO Brick Road", where Batman, Gandalf, and Wyldstyle confront off against her, who appears right after Dorothy and her friends get missing alongside the Blood-red Slippers, and were able to defeat her with water and steal the Shift Keystone from her. Her hat is after salvaged by Lord Vortech.
  • The Wicked Witch of the W appears in Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz, voiced by Laraine Newman.
  • In the American television bear witness Supernatural, the Wicked Witch appears every bit the villain of the episode "Sleep Party" portrayed past Maya Massar. She comes to World in 1935 with a plan to get the Key to Oz and bring her army to Earth to accept over. Dorothy Gale, who is in fact the girl of 50. Frank Baum, becomes a monster hunter to stop the Wicked Witch later she spent some time trapped in Oz with the resistance where the leaders being cursed to transform into the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Panthera leo. During that time, Dorothy is unable to kill her. When the Wicked Witch followed her back to World, Dorothy was somewhen forced to just trap herself and the Wicked Witch in a jar in the Men of Letters Bunker until someone else can work out her weakness. When the two of them are accidentally released in 2013, the Wicked Witch begins searching for the Key to continue her plan, the protagonists initially just able to wound the Wicked Witch with bullets made from poppy seed extract. At one point, the Wicked Witch of the West institute where Crowley was locked up and got some information out of him. She possesses Sam and Dean Winchester to kill Dorothy, whom she can't hurt due to the blessing Dorothy received from Glinda upon arrival. As the Wicked Witch gets her hands on the Key to Oz and prepares to get her army through the door, she is killed by Charlie Bradbury with the Ruby-red Slippers when Dorothy identifies them as possessing Oz magic and beingness suitably sharp. And so Charlie closes the door before the winged monkeys can enter.
  • The Wicked Witch of the West appears equally one of the villains in The Lego Batman Movie, voiced by Riki Lindhome who was uncredited for the role. She is depicted as an inmate of the Phantom Zone, the group of which she is function of is known as the Ubers. Upon Joker proposing his program to escape the Phantom Zone and assist him invade Gotham City and defeat Batman, the Wicked Witch of the West tells Joker "We're listening." When Harley Quinn steals the Phantom Zone Projector from Arkham Aviary's evidence locker and frees Joker and the Phantom Zone inmates, the Wicked Witch of the West unleashes the Winged Monkeys to fly around and crusade mayhem in Gotham City where Robin kicks them off the Bat-Aeroplane. The Wicked Witch of the West besides infiltrates Wayne Island forth with Joker, Harley Quinn, and the other Phantom Zone inmates. She is defeated past Squad Batman and their enemies in the finish and sent back to the Phantom Zone.
  • In the Amazon Prime animated serial Lost in Oz, West (voiced by Nika Futterman) is the great, great granddaughter of the Wicked Witch of the Due west who journeys with Dorothy Gale (the descendant of the original), her pet domestic dog Toto, and a medium-sized munchkin name Ojo to assistance her return to Kansas after she lands in the futuristic magical land of Oz. When she becomes greedy, her skin turns green as if she's most turning into her antecedent.
  • The Wicked Witch of the W appears in Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz, voiced once again by Laraine Newman. Afterwards she was melted, her spirit was imprisoned in her crystal ball. The Wicked Witch of the Westward had to accept her niece Wilhelmina (voiced by Jessica DiCicco) and the flying monkeys on her niece'due south side scheme to steal the Ruby Slippers that are needed to restore her.
  • In the third volume of Shazam!, the Wicked Witch of the West came from the Wozenderlands and is a member of the Monster Society of Evil. She was amidst its members imprisoned in the Dungeon of Eternity within the Monsterlands until Mister Mind instructed Doc Sivana on how to gratuitous them.[thirteen] Every bit Shazam fights the Mister Mind-controlled C.C. Batson, Freddy fights the Wicked Witch of the West and Jeepers. She does managed to utilize her spells to trap Eugene in some vines.[fourteen] When Shazam defeats Mister Mind, the resulting magical free energy knocked out the Wicked Witch of the West and the remainder of the Monster Society of Evil. The Monster Guild of Evil was mentioned to have been remanded to Rock Falls Penitentiary where the Shazam Family built a special department to comprise magical threats.[xv]
  • The Wicket Witch of the West appeared in the 2021 film Space Jam: A New Legacy.[16] [17] She is among the Warner Bros. Serververse inhabitants that watches the basketball match betwixt the Tune Squad and the Goon Squad.

References [edit]

  1. ^ L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
  2. ^ Baum, L. Frank; Hearn, Michael Patrick. The Annotated Magician of Oz, W. W. Norton & Visitor, 1976. p.231. ISBN 0-517-50086-8
  3. ^ Zimmermann, Denise; Gleason, Katherine A. The Complete Idiot'southward Guide to Wicca and Witchcraft, 2nd Edition, Blastoff, 2003. p.vii. ISBN 1-59257-111-5
  4. ^ "AFI's 100 Years ...100 Heroes & Villains".
  5. ^ "90. The Wicked Witch of the West". Empire . Retrieved iv December 2010.
  6. ^ Nissen, Axel (2007). Actresses of a Certain Character: Forty Familiar Hollywood Faces from the Thirties to the Fifties. McFarland & Company. pp. 196–202. ISBN978-0-7864-2746-viii. Archived from the original on August 1, 2020. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  7. ^ Potempa, Philip (October 27, 2017). "Wicked Witch of the West not ever a fearfulness sight". Post-Tribune. Crown Point, IN: Chicago Tribune Media Group. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  8. ^ Buckley, Michael (June six, 2004). "STAGE TO SCREENS: A Conversation with Wicked Nominee and Television receiver Veteran Winnie Holzman". Playbill. Archived from the original on November 21, 2007. Retrieved Nov 8, 2007.
  9. ^ "Wicked – Script". MusicalSchwartz.com. Retrieved November 8, 2007.
  10. ^ Maguire, Gregory (1995). Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the Westward . ReganBooks. ISBN978-0-06-039144-7.
  11. ^ "One time Upon a Time: Rebecca Mader Is Playing The Wicked Witch of the Due west! See the Incredible First Photos". E!. Dec 15, 2013. Retrieved March xi, 2014.
  12. ^ "Zelena". ABC. Retrieved 22 Nov 2015.
  13. ^ Shazam! Vol. 3 #eleven. DC Comics.
  14. ^ Shazam! Vol. iii #13. DC Comics.
  15. ^ Shazam! Vol. 3 #xiv. DC Comics.
  16. ^ "Space Jam 2 Leaks Include Joker, Mask, Pennywise". x March 2020.
  17. ^ "Space Jam two Footage Leaks: Harry Potter, Wicked Witch, Joker, Mask". 11 March 2020.

External links [edit]

  • Media related to Wicked Witch of the W at Wikimedia Commons

Do Witches Melt In Water,

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicked_Witch_of_the_West

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