Everyone deserves a chance to fly, and if the tickets that theater patrons bought to hear those lyrics in Wicked turn out to be bogus, at least they should get a swift refund.
So argues a class action lawsuit filed Monday in Multnomah County Circuit Court, in which a Portland woman says the ticket resale marketplace StubHub still hasn’t refunded her for two counterfeit tickets to see Wicked at the Keller Auditorium last October.
Fake tickets are a common risk on ticket resale websites. At issue in the case of Amy Hoffman, however, is StubHub’s FanProtection money-back guarantee.
On Oct. 27, the lawsuit says, Amy Hoffman spent $446.79 on two tickets to see Wicked when the touring Broadway production visited Portland. When her family arrived at the Keller Auditorium for the Oct. 30 performance, Hoffman was told her tickets had already been scanned by other guests. She joined a line with what she says were at least 20 other guests waiting to file fraud complaints.
“This poor little girl in a pink dress was just bawling her eyes out,” Hoffman says of a young theater patron she saw in the fraud line as they waited with their families. “It seemed like nobody noticed her because they were dealing with the scenario. It broke my heart that this was her eyes to the world and how horrible it can be sometimes, and this could be her dream at that age.”
Since she and other family members had never seen Wicked, Hoffman purchased new tickets from Keller’s box office after waiting in another line, ultimately missing part of the first act.
“My cousin asked, how often does this happen?’ and [Keller management] said every show,” Hoffman says. “It’s been a bit of a—I don’t want to say ‘shit show,’ but that’s my lack of a better word.”
In her lawsuit, Hoffman says the tickets included a FanProtection Guarantee promising “valid tickets or your money back.” But Hoffman alleges she received neither valid tickets from StubHub nor her money back. She reached out to StubHub on Oct. 30, the lawsuit says, and for several subsequent months, and while she was promised a refund initially, she was told to set up a new PayPal account since the card she used couldn’t be refunded. Hoffman alleges that StubHub has given conflicting information to her credit card company, which has not been able to reverse the charges from StubHub.
StubHub did not respond to WW’s request for comment.
After filing a consumer complaint with the Oregon Department of Justice, Hoffman found Portland lawyer Michael Fuller.
“We said, let’s wait a little while and see if they give you your refund, but it became pretty clear after several weeks that that just wasn’t going to happen,” Fuller says.
Fuller says he found several instances in other states where StubHub customers complained about similar failures in the company’s FanProtection Guarantee to protect them from fraud. California’s justice department, for example, ordered an investigation into StubHub’s refund policies from 2020 amid the pandemic, which resulted in a $20 million settlement for that state’s consumers. Fuller says he would like to see Portland and the state of Oregon do more to take on companies who leave customers hanging.
“I think there’s an increase in online fraud, banking fraud, fraud of every type involving technology,” Fuller says. “We see from every angle companies less and less willing to work with the customer, assuming one of the other companies will take care of it.”
Fuller noted that one crucial factor in the case will be whether Hoffman waived her right to take collective action against StubHub when making her purchase, a move that many tech companies now weave into their terms of service (Hoffman says she did not waive her right).
Wicked was the first show that Hoffman used StubHub for, and while she says that she will be far more cautious of online purchases going forward—and purchasing event tickets directly from venues—she’s advised her cousin to double-check the tickets she bought through StubHub before the Wicked fiasco for the upcoming Book of Mormon production this spring.
A Portland woman is taking legal action against StubHub after she purchased fake tickets to the hit Broadway musical “Wicked” and was denied a refund.
The woman, who wishes to remain anonymous, purchased the tickets through StubHub for a performance of “Wicked” at the Keller Auditorium in Portland. However, when she arrived at the theater, she was informed that the tickets were counterfeit and she would not be allowed entry.
Despite contacting StubHub immediately and providing proof of the fake tickets, the woman was told that they could not issue a refund due to their policy on third-party sellers.
Frustrated and out of pocket, the woman has now filed a lawsuit against StubHub in hopes of recouping her losses and holding the company accountable for their failure to protect customers from fraudulent sellers.
This incident serves as a warning to always be cautious when purchasing tickets from third-party websites and to be aware of the risks involved. Consumers should always do their due diligence and research the seller before making a purchase to avoid falling victim to scams.
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Portland woman takes legal action against StubHub
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Portland woman’s fight for justice against StubHub
In the year without a frontrunner, the doors are still wide open. I’m predicting three films will tie for the most nominations with 10 each: “Conclave,” “Emilia Pérez” and “Wicked.”
Jacques Audiard’s crime musical “Emilia Pérez” is poised to dominate, and if it can tack on a tech nom or two, the Netflix film could become the most nominated non-English-language film in history, surpassing “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” (2000) and “Roma” (2018). The streamer’s primary awards pony could potentially go even further. On an ideal nomination day, if it lands nods in all of its “on the bubble” categories — such as cinematography, sound, and two extra bids for supporting actress (Selena Gomez) and original song — it could secure 14 nominations, tying with “All About Eve” (1950), “Titanic” (1997), and “La La Land” (2016) as the most-nominated films of all time. Notably, “La La Land,” also a musical, is the only one to lose the best picture.
At the heart of “Emilia Pérez” is Karla Sofía Gascón’s spellbinding performance, which could also make history as the first openly transgender acting nominee. However, with such a competitive lead actress race, possible vote-splitting among her co-star Zoe Saldaña (who may get elevated from supporting to lead), and critical darlings like Marianne Jean-Baptiste (“Hard Truths”) and Fernanda Torres (“I’m Still Here”) surging in the final days of voting, this could be a year where any of the presumed “locks” is absent on nomination morning.
Still, the race for Oscar glory is fluid. The path is always open to twists and turns.
Edward Berger’s “Conclave” looks to repeat its huge BAFTA showing, including director and acting nods for Ralph Fiennes and Isabella Rossellini (it would be the veteran star’s first). The Vatican thriller is a viable best picture contender for Focus Features and could mark the studio’s first win in the top category. Fresh off his Oscar triumph with “All Quiet on the Western Front” (2022), another acclaimed hit by the German director, could once again dominate the conversation.
Meanwhile, Universal’s box office spellbinder “Wicked” appears to hold plenty of space for stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande, in addition to a slew of technical noms including costumes, editing and visual effects. Still, director Jon M. Chu, who missed the DGA lineup, doesn’t seem likely to make the cut, but I wouldn’t count him out of the race by a longshot.
For many decades, one or two films have co-led the nomination tally. The last time three films tied for the most was in 1952 with “High Noon,” “Moulin Rouge,” and “The Quiet Man,” with seven each. They all went on to lose the top prize to Cecil B. DeMille’s “The Greatest Show on Earth.” As always, there will be some surprises and snubs. On the other hand, there’s a version of the announcement that sees four films with double-digit nomination tallies (if you add “The Brutalist”).
Speaking of A24’s historical epic, “The Brutalist” should net eight mentions (at least), including for Golden Globe winners Adrien Brody in best actor and Brady Corbet for directing, but supporting actress hopeful Felicity Jones and editing are two categories it could be left out entirely. At the same time, Searchlight Pictures’ Bob Dylan biopic “A Complete Unknown” has mounted a strong campaign and is likely to land three acting mentions for Timothée Chalamet (marking his second career nom), Edward Norton (would be his fourth) and breakout star Monica Barbaro. However, James Mangold, who’s never been nominated for directing, could be a notable miss despite a DGA nod. Notably, DGA hasn’t matched the Oscar directing lineup since 2009 (Kathryn Bigelow, James Cameron, Lee Daniels, Jason Reitman and Quentin Tarantino).
Despite a headline-grabbing snub for the first film, Denis Villeneuve is looking to be part of the “snubbed” list once again for “Dune: Part Two.” What’s most notable for Villeneuve is he seems to be the only previous directing nominee in the running (previously nominated for 2016’s “Arrival”). A lineup of only first-time directing nominees hasn’t happened since 1997 — winner James Cameron (“Titanic”), Peter Cattaneo (“The Full Monty”), Atom Egoyan (“The Sweet Hereafter”), Curtis Hanson (“L.A. Confidential”) and Gus Van Sant (“Good Will Hunting”).
While we’re at it, the best director category is packed with talent, and there’s concern that no women may make the cut. Hopes are high for Payal Kapadia, whose narrative debut, “All We Imagine as Light,” has been lauded by critics, and for Coralie Fargeat, whose body-horror thriller “The Substance” has been the talk of awards season, thanks to Demi Moore’s surefire best actress bid. Both women received directing nods at the Golden Globes, with Fargeat also recognized by Critics Choice and BAFTA. However, all of those honors came in expanded fields with more than five nominees. An interesting trend worth noting: in recent years, surprise international directors who landed Oscar nominations often preceded them with a win at the European Film Awards for best director — examples include Justine Triet (“Anatomy of a Fall”), Ruben Östlund (“Triangle of Sadness”), Thomas Vinterberg (“Another Round”), and Paweł Pawlikowski (“Cold War”). Fargeat, however, was not even nominated by the EFAs.
Independent movies are aiming to break into the best picture race. Neon’s Palme d’Or winner “Anora” has been a critical darling of the season and is poised to pick up six noms, including four for writer, director, producer, and film editor Sean Baker. At the same time, Jesse Eisenberg’s moving dramedy “A Real Pain” is bolstered by its recent PGA nomination and its supporting actor frontrunner Kieran Culkin.
Trying to guess how far A24’s prison drama “Sing Sing” from Greg Kwedar has kept me up at night. Released last summer, the film could get a significant boost from the Actors Branch, as Colman Domingo is well-positioned to nab his second consecutive nod following “Rustin” (2022). Moreover, breakout star Clarence Maclin could make history as the first person nominated for both supporting actor and screenplay for the same film. It’s a race too close to call.
“September 5”
Jürgen Olczyk
I’ve also carried a hunch we could be in store for a movie that’s nominated for a single Oscar for best picture, which hasn’t occurred since “The Ox-Bow Incident” (1943). There are a few movies that could fit into that box, such as Clint Eastwood’s procedural thriller “Juror No. 2,” Tim Fehlbaum’s historical drama “September 5,” RaMell Ross’ experimental beauty “Nickel Boys” and Luca Guadganino’s sultry sports flick “Challengers.” All could be hovering in other categories, but at this time of writing, all are predicted to be shut out of the Oscars on Thursday; which would be disappointing on multiple fronts.
This year’s proceedings saw a last-minute twist, with the voting deadline extended five days because of the devastating Los Angeles wildfires. What impact this had on the final turnout remains a lingering question.
The Oscar nominations will be announced on Thursday, Jan. 23 by Rachel Sennot and Bowen Yang. Conan O’Brien will host the 2025 ceremony on March 2.
Here are Variety’s final predictions.
Note: All listed producers, artisans, etc., are not final. The Academy ultimately determines who receives the nomination; individual category pages, with the official rankings, will be updated throughout the week before the nominations announcement.
“Anora” (Neon) Sean Baker, Alex Coco, Samantha Quan “The Brutalist” (A24) Nick Gordon, D.J. Gugenheim, Andrew Lauren, Trevor Matthews, Andrew Morrison, Brian Young “A Complete Unknown” (Searchlight Pictures) Fred Berger, James Mangold, Alex Heineman “Conclave” (Focus Features) Alice Dawson, Robert Harris, Juliette Howell, Michael Jackman, Tessa Ross “Dune: Part Two” (Warner Bros.) Cale Boyter, Tanya Lapointe, Mary Parent, Denis Villeneuve “Emilia Pérez” (Netflix) Jacques Audiard, Pascal Caucheteux, Valérie Schermann, Anthony Vacarello “A Real Pain” (Searchlight Pictures) Ewa Puszczyńska, Jennifer Semler, Jesse Eisenberg “Sing Sing” (A24) Clint Bentley, Greg Kwedar, Monique Walton “The Substance” (Mubi) Coralie Fargeat, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner “Wicked” (Universal Pictures) Marc Platt, David Stone
Alternate: “Juror No. 2”
Achievement in Directing
Jacques Audiard, “Emilia Pérez” Sean Baker, “Anora” Edward Berger, “Conclave” Brady Corbet, “The Brutalist” Payal Kapadia, “All We Imagine as Light”
Alternate: James Mangold, “A Complete Unknown”
Actor in a Leading Role
Adrien Brody, “The Brutalist” Timothée Chalamet, “A Complete Unknown” Daniel Craig, “Queer” Colman Domingo, “Sing Sing” Ralph Fiennes, “Conclave”
Alternate: Sebastian Stan, “The Apprentice”
Actress in a Leading Role
Cynthia Erivo, “Wicked” Marianne Jean-Baptiste, “Hard Truths” Mikey Madison, “Anora” Demi Moore, “The Substance” Fernanda Torres, “I’m Still Here”
Alternate: Karla Sofía Gascón, “Emilia Pérez”
Actor in a Supporting Role
Yura Borisov, “Anora” Kieran Culkin, “A Real Pain” Clarence Maclin, “Sing Sing” Edward Norton, “A Complete Unknown” Guy Pearce, “The Brutalist”
Alternate: Jeremy Strong, “The Apprentice”
Actress in a Supporting Role
Monica Barbaro, “A Complete Unknown” Jamie Lee Curtis, “The Last Showgirl” Ariana Grande, “Wicked” Isabella Rossellini, “Conclave” Zoe Saldaña, “Emilia Pérez”
Alternate: Felicity Jones, “The Brutalist”
Original Screenplay
“All We Imagine as Light” (Payal Kapadia) “Anora” (Sean Baker) “The Brutalist” (Brady Corbet, Mona Fastvold) “A Real Pain” (Jesse Eisenberg) “The Substance” (Coralie Fargeat)
“Flow” (Gints Zilbalodis, Matīss Kaža, Ron Dyens, Gregory Zalcman) “Inside Out 2” (Kelsey Mann, Mark Nielsen) “Memoir of a Snail” (Adam Elliot, Liz Kearney) “Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl” (Nick Park, Merlin Crossingham, Richard Beek) “The Wild Robot” (Chris Sanders, Jeff Hermann)
Alternate: “Moana 2”
Production Design
“The Brutalist” (Judy Becker) “Conclave” (Suzie Davies, Roberta Federico) “Dune: Part Two” (Zsuzsanna Sipos, Shane Vieau, Patrice Vermette) “Nosferatu” (Craig Lathrop) “Wicked” (Nathan Crowley, Lee Sandales)
“Dune: Part Two” (Love Larson, Eva Von Bahr) “Emilia Pérez” (Julia Floch Carbonel, Simon Livet) “Nosferatu” (Traci Loader, Suzanne Stokes-Munton, David White) “The Substance” (Pierre-Olivier Persin) “Wicked” (Frances Hannon, Sarah Nuth, Laura Blount)
Alternate: “A Different Man”
Sound
“A Complete Unknown” (Ted Caplan, Tod Maitland, David Giammarco, Paul Massey, Donald Sylvester) “Dune: Part Two” (Gareth John, Richard King, Ron Bartlett, Doug Hemphill) “Gladiator II” (Matthew Collinge, Danny Sheehan, Paul Massey, Stéphane Bucher) “Joker: Folie à Deux” (Steve Morrow, Erik Aadahl, Ethan Van der Ryn, Jason Ruder, Tom Ozanich, Dean A. Zupancic) “Wicked” (Nancy Nugent Title, John Marquis, Andy Nelson, Simon Hayes)
Alternate: “Emilia Pérez”
Visual Effects
“Better Man” (Luke Miller, David Clayton, Keith Herft, Peter Stubbs) “Deadpool & Wolverine” (Swen Gillberg, Matthew Twyford, Vincent Papaix, Dominic Tuohy) “Dune: Part Two” (Paul Lambert, Stephen James, Rhys Salcombe, Gerd Nefzer) “Gladiator II” (Mark Bakowski, Pietro Ponti, Nikki Penny, Neil Corbould) “Wicked” (Pablo Helman, Jonathan Fawkner, Paul Corbould, David Shirk)
Alternate: “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes”
Original Score
“The Brutalist” (Daniel Blumberg) “Conclave” (Volker Bertelmann) “Emilia Pérez” (Clément Ducol, Camille) “The Room Next Door” (Alberto Iglesias) “The Wild Robot” (Kris Bowers)
Alternate: “Wicked”
Original Song
“Never Too Late” from “Elton John: Never Too Late” (Elton John & Brandi Carlile) “El Mal” from “Emilia Pérez” (Clément Ducol, Camille and Jacques Audiard) “Sick in the Head” from “Kneecap” (Móglaí Bap, Mo Chara, DJ Próvaí, Adrian Louis Richard Mcleod, and Toddla T) “The Journey” from “The Six Triple Eight” (Diane Warren) “Kiss the Sky” from “The Wild Robot” (Delacey, Jordan Johnson, Stefan Johnson, Maren Morris, Michael Pollack & Ali Tamposi)
Alternate: “Harper and Will Go West” from “Will & Harper”
“Emilia Pérez” from France “Flow” from Latvia “I’m Still Here” from Brazil “Kneecap” from Ireland “Vermiglio” from Italy
Alternate: “The Seed of the Sacred Fig”
Animated Short
“A Bear Named Wojtek” (Ian Gardner, Iain Harvey) “In the Shadow of Cypress” (Hossein Molayemi, Shirin Sohani) “Maybe Elephants” (Torill Kove, Alex Ivanovici) “Wander to Wonder” (Nina Gantz, Stienette Bosklopper) “Yuck!” (Loïc Espuche, Juliette Marquet)
Alternate: “The 21”
Documentary Short
“Death By Numbers” (Kim A. Snyder, Maria Cuomo Cole) “I Am Ready, Warden” (Smriti Mundhra, Nina Aujla) “Incident” (Bill Morrison, Jamie Kalven) “Once Upon a Time in Ukraine” (Betsy West, Earle Mack) “A Swim Lesson” (Rashida Jones, Will McCormack)
Alternate: “Makayla’s Voice: A Letter to the World”
Live Action Short
“Anuja” (Adam J. Graves, Mindy Kaling) “Dovecote” (Marco Perego, Zoe Saldaña) “The Last Ranger” (Cindy Lee, Will Hawkes) “A Lien” (David Cutler-Kreutz, Sam Cutler-Kreutz) “The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent” (Nebojsa Slijepcevic, Danijel Pek)
Alternate: “The Ice Cream Man”
With the Academy Awards just around the corner, it’s time to make our final predictions for the nominations. This year has been filled with incredible performances and films, making the competition tougher than ever. Here are our top picks for the major categories:
Best Picture:
1. Conclave
2. Wicked
3. The Power of the Dog
4. Dune
5. Belfast
Best Director:
1. Jane Campion – The Power of the Dog
2. Denis Villeneuve – Dune
3. Steven Spielberg – West Side Story
4. Paul Thomas Anderson – Licorice Pizza
5. Kenneth Branagh – Belfast
Best Actor:
1. Benedict Cumberbatch – The Power of the Dog
2. Will Smith – King Richard
3. Andrew Garfield – Tick, Tick… Boom!
4. Bradley Cooper – Nightmare Alley
5. Leonardo DiCaprio – Don’t Look Up
Best Actress:
1. Kristen Stewart – Spencer
2. Jessica Chastain – The Eyes of Tammy Faye
3. Olivia Colman – The Lost Daughter
4. Nicole Kidman – Being the Ricardos
5. Penelope Cruz – Parallel Mothers
These are just a few of our predictions for the upcoming Academy Awards nominations. Who do you think will take home the coveted golden statues? Let us know in the comments below!
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“Survive till ’25” has been the mantra of the movie theater business — heck, the entire film industry — ever since pandemic-related delays and Hollywood’s labor strikes wreaked havoc on studio slates and production calendars. Several would-be 2024 blockbusters, like Tom Cruise’s eighth “Mission Impossible” and Marvel’s “Captain America: Brave New World,” were pushed into this calendar year instead, providing 2025 with a profusion of movies that everyone hopes will claw the box office back to something approaching its pre-COVID glory.
Can Ethan Hunt, a smattering of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes and a new generation of rogue dinosaurs come to the rescue? Will the star power of Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt and Dwayne Johnson help boost their risky original movies to fame and fortune? Variety peers into its crystal ball to forecast the year’s triumphs, misfires — and everything in between.
20th Century Studios
Avatar: Fire and Ash (Disney)
Release date: Dec. 19 Thrill factor: Three years ago, “Avatar: The Way of Water” grossed $2.3 billion and proved beyond a doubt that audiences remain insatiable for the sci-fi saga of Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña) on the alien moon of Pandora. Now James Cameron returns with the third chapter, which as the title implies, will introduce the “Ash People” clan of the Na’vi. Chill factor: Maybe a three-year gap is too … short … for “Avatar” movies? Verdict: Never bet against Cameron: Disney will put another $2 billion in the bank.
The Conjuring: Last Rites (Warner Bros.)
Release date: Sept. 5 Thrill factor: Across eight films, the “Conjuring” universe has quietly risen to become the highest-grossing horror franchise in history. Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are back as ghost hunters for what’s billed as the final entry in the occult-tilted series. Chill factor: Other than a few low-budget indie successes, 2024 was disappointing for movies about things that go bump in the night. Verdict: Horror buffs will be summoned to “Conjuring 4” like an exorcism on Halloween night, making for scary-good profit margins.
Wicked: For Good (Universal)
Release date: Nov. 21 Thrill factor: Nothing is riskier than splitting a movie (a musical, no less!) in two, but “Wicked: Part One” beat the odds to become a big-screen smash. Fans won’t be able to resist the journey back to Oz for the conclusion of the story of Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) and Glinda (Ariana Grande). Chill factor: The second act has showstoppers (“No Good Deed”) and tearjerkers (“For Good”) but the best, catchiest songs are in the first film. Verdict: Like a seed dropped by a skybird, “Wicked” will go down as the biggest Broadway adaptation in box office history.
Zootopia 2 (Disney)
Release date: Nov. 26 Thrill factor: Zootopia Police Department’s finest rejoin forces for a sequel to 2016’s billion-dollar blockbuster. Chill factor: Sequelitis can strike without warning. Just ask “Joker: Folie à Deux,” “Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom” or “The Marvels,” all of which were disappointing follow-ups to box office behemoths. Verdict: “Zootopia 2” will give “Moana 2” — and its record-breaking Thanksgiving debut — a run for its money.
Universal / Courtesy Everett Collection
28 Years Later (Sony)
Release date: June 20 Thrill factor: Director Danny Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland revisit the zombified United Kingdom of 2002’s “28 Days Later,” this time with Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jodie Comer and Ralph Fiennes running for their lives from the undead hordes. Chill factor: With “The Walking Dead” and “The Last of Us” gobbling up audiences on TV, zombie movies have been a bit, well, lifeless of late. Verdict: If the movie is even half as chilling as the utterly terrifying teaser trailer, then these zombies will scare up some tasty box office.
The Fantastic Four: First Steps (Disney)
Release date: July 25 Thrill factor: Marvel’s First Family finally joins the MCU, with Pedro Pascal, Vanessa Kirby, Joseph Quinn and Ebon Moss-Bachrach as the titular superheroes living in a retro-futuristic Earth of the 1960s — and, pointedly, separate from Marvel Studios’ main timeline. Chill factor: The previous “Fantastic 4” movies (from the 2000s and 2015) were less than inspiring, creatively and financially; audiences could shrug at this attempt to make the new foursome into movie stars. Verdict: Marvel Studios’ next two “Avengers” outings will build directly from the events in this film, so, even more than most MCU fare, this one has to be a smash. Fortunately for Disney, it’s box office clobberin’ time.
Jurassic World Rebirth (Universal)
Release date: July 2 Thrill factor: Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali and Jonathan Bailey take the reins of the 32-year-old franchise, playing a team tasked with retrieving material from dinosaurs that could be the key to a miracle cure. Gareth Edwards — who has fashioned a career helming handsomely mounted VFX movies like “Godzilla” and “The Creator” — directs. Chill factor: There is a chance that, after three “Jurassic World” movies over the past 10 years, moviegoers may have grown sick of dinosaurs. Verdict: C’mon. Audiences love dinos, and this movie and its fresh, talented cast will rampage through the box office again.
Michael (Lionsgate)
Release date: Oct. 3 Thrill factor: Musical biopics are all the rage, and everyone on the planet knows Michael Jackson’s deep catalog of hits. Plus, director Antoine Fuqua cast Jackson’s nephew Jaafar Jackson to re-create the late King of Pop’s iconic performances. Chill factor: Jackson is a divisive cultural figure, whose legacy has been tainted by multiple allegations that he sexually abused children for decades. (The musician denied any wrongdoing; a 1993 lawsuit involving the singer was settled out of civil court, and in 2005 he was tried and acquitted on different claims.) At the very least, “Michael” is guaranteed to spark conversation and scrutiny. Verdict: Controversy surrounding Jackson’s legacy won’t matter to global audiences, and “Michael” will moonwalk to box office glory.
Warner Bros.
Good Fortune (Lionsgate)
Release date: Oct. 17 Thrill factor: Keanu Reeves, the internet’s boyfriend, plays a literal angel alongside Seth Rogen, Keke Palmer and Sandra Oh in the body-swap comedy from Aziz Ansari in his feature directorial debut. Chill factor: Commercially successful R-rated comedies are almost as rare as the prospect of actually switching bodies with another person. Verdict: Reviews will play a big part in how many tickets are sold. But “Good Fortune” could get a needed boost in attention if Palmer delivers on what she does best: Churning out meme-worthy moments on the press tour.
Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning (Paramount)
Release date: May 23 Thrill factor: Tom Cruise’s death-defying stunts in his eighth go-around as the Impossible Mission Force’s most valuable agent offers the kind of cinematic spectacle that demands to be seen on the biggest possible screen. Chill factor: “Mission: Impossible” proved all the ways that cutting a movie in half could go wrong. In 2023, “Dead Reckoning Part One” — what should have been a sure-fire hit after “Top Gun: Maverick” — was crushed by “Barbenheimer,” leading the studio to rename the follow-up film. “MI:7” cost nearly $300 million, and these action-adventures aren’t getting any cheaper to produce. Verdict: Cruise’s (possible?) swan song as Ethan Hunt will pack cinemas in early summer, but “Mission: Impossible” won’t go out on a series high.
The Smashing Machine (A24)
Release date: Undated Thrill factor: Dwayne Johnson steps back into the ring, not as the Rock, but as mixed martial artist Mark Kerr, in a biopic written and directed by indie auteur Benny Safdie (“Uncut Gems”). Chill factor: The 52-year-old Johnson, who also produced the film, is just three years younger than Kerr, so it’s unclear whether ticket buyers will buy him as Kerr at his height in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Verdict: Johnson’s career has desperately needed this kind of role, his first dramatic one since 2013’s “Pain & Gain” — but the film’s success hangs on whether the actor can still deliver a grounded, emotionally complex performance.
Superman (Warner Bros.)
Release date: July 11 Thrill factor: James Gunn relaunches the Man of Steel and the DC Universe, with David Corenswet’s Superman living (for the first time on the big screen) on an Earth filled with other superheroes, not all of whom get along. Chill factor: Comic book cinema isn’t nearly as bulletproof as it used to be, and the last solo-Supes flicks, 2013’s “Man of Steel,” was a gentleman’s triple. This film needs to be a home run. Verdict: If Gunn can marry truth, justice and the American way to the outré sensibility that made the “Guardians of the Galaxy” trilogy a global sensation, then the DCU will be up, up and away.
Apple Original Films
F1 (Apple Original Films and Warner Bros.)
Release date: June 27 Thrill factor: Brad Pitt teams with “Top Gun: Maverick” director Joseph Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer to play a retired Formula One driver recruited to mentor a hotshot new star (Damson Idris). Chill factor: Apple’s track-record for expensive, star-driven theatrical releases is (checks notes) not a single profitable film. Not one. Verdict: If Pitt, Kosinski, Bruckheimer and the global popularity of Formula One aren’t enough to give Apple its first win in theaters, then at least Tim Cook has iPhone 17 to look forward to.
Snow White (Disney)
Release date: March 21 Thrill factor: “West Side Story” star Rachel Zegler brings her killer pipes to the original Disney princess, with “Wonder Woman” star Gal Gadot playing against type as the Evil Queen. Chill factor: The $240 million-budgeted adaptation has been dogged by expensive reshoots and calls for a boycott because of Zegler and Gadot’s (opposing) stances on the Israel-Hamas war, which maybe isn’t the thing everyone wants to think about when going to a Disney musical. Verdict: After one too many revisits to the vault, families will tire of the Magic Kingdom’s latest live-action remake.
Tron: Ares (Disney)
Release date: Oct. 10 Thrill factor: The first two “Tron” movies were set almost exclusively inside the digital space known as the Grid, but this threequel from director Joachim Rønning (“Maleficent: Mistress of Evil”) places Jared Leto’s titular living program in the real world. Chill factor: Leto may be an Oscar winner, but he is not, to date, anything close to a box office draw, which Disney needs for a wildly sporadic sci-fi franchise that looks great but has never evinced overwhelming audience demand for more. Verdict: Improving on the $410 million global gross of 2010’s “Tron: Legacy” will be as difficult as getting a perfect score in “Pac-Man.”
Untitled Paul Thomas Anderson Film (Warner Bros.)
Release date: Aug. 8 Thrill factor: Paul Thomas Anderson — who’s created masterful works like “Boogie Nights,” “Magnolia” and “Phantom Thread” — has recruited Leonardo DiCaprio, one of Hollywood’s last remaining bankable stars, to lead the buzzy cast of Sean Penn, Regina Hall and Alana Haim. Chill factor: The film’s $140 million budget will require at least $300 million in global ticket sales to turn a profit theatrically. Anderson’s highest-grossing movie, 2007’s “There Will Be Blood,” made $76 million worldwide. Verdict: The untitled project — reportedly a crime drama — will become a critical darling, but it won’t be in the race for the Golden Globe for cinematic and box office achievement.
Exciting News for Fans of Superman, Jurassic World 4, and Wicked 2!
Get ready, because some big blockbuster sequels are on the horizon! Superman, Jurassic World, and Wicked fans, rejoice, because new installments of these beloved franchises are in the works.
First up, Superman is set to return to the big screen in a highly anticipated sequel. Fans can expect to see the Man of Steel face off against new enemies, save the day, and showcase his superhuman abilities in jaw-dropping action sequences.
Next, Jurassic World 4 is in development, promising more thrilling dinosaur encounters, nail-biting suspense, and heart-pounding adventure. Get ready to return to Isla Nublar and experience the excitement of the Jurassic World franchise once again.
And last but certainly not least, Wicked 2 is in the works, much to the delight of musical theater fans everywhere. The beloved Broadway show will continue the story of Elphaba and Glinda, exploring their complex friendship and the magical world of Oz in a new and exciting way.
Whether you’re a fan of superheroes, dinosaurs, or musicals, there’s something for everyone to look forward to with these upcoming sequels. Stay tuned for more updates and get ready to experience the magic and excitement of these iconic franchises once again.
The actresses opened up about working together to establish equal salaries while filming the two-part movie musical in a joint interview with Variety published on Thursday, January 2. “We went through our contracts together and called each other up,” Grande, 31, shared. “[We were like,] ‘Did you see that? What do you think about that? Let’s get together.’”
Erivo, 37, added: “We both went through it — ‘What number are we doing? How do you feel about that?’ We were really f—ing honest. And that’s really rare. People don’t do that.”
Noting that she and Erivo are “very different,” Grande told the outlet that “her needs [became] my needs” while working on the project. Erivo reiterated her words, stating: “And her needs become mine.”
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo can’t stop and won’t stop gushing about each other during their Wicked press tour. “Cynthia is just an absolute brilliant gift of a human being,” Grande, 31, told Paul Mescal in a new conversation for Variety’s Actors on Actors issue published Tuesday, December 10. “I think we tried to keep […]
Shortly after the film’s November 2024 theatrical release, false reports spread online that Grande was paid millions more for her role as Glinda than Erivo for her role as Elphaba.
“Reports of pay disparity between Cynthia and Ariana are completely false and based on internet fodder,” a spokesperson for Universal Pictures told Us Weekly in a statement at the time. “The women received equal pay for their work on Wicked.”
A source close to Grande also told Us that the rumors “started on Reddit” and were “completely not true.”
Universal Pictures
Director Jon M. Chu praised the women’s equal pay negotiations in Thursday’s Variety interview. “This is a modern production,” he stated. “This is what Hollywood should reflect. These are co-CEOs of ‘Wicked Inc.’”
Based on the Broadway musical and 1995 novel of the same name by Gregory Maguire, Wicked tells the story of Elphaba, a.k.a. the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda, a.k.a. Glinda the Good Witch, before and during the events of The Wizard of Oz. The plot follows the two women as their relationship develops from rival roommates to best friends to unlikely rivals amid the backdrop of societal turmoil in Oz.
Grande and Erivo’s decision to share salaries and contracts comes as no surprise to fans of Wicked — which hit theaters in November 2024 — as the pair share a strong friendship on and off the big screen. The two have even gone viral for getting emotional in several of their press tour interviews.
Something Wicked this way comes — and Cynthia Erivo is celebrating! As the long-awaited musical adaptation hits theaters on Friday, November 22, Erivo — who plays Elphaba in the movie — took to Instagram to share a heartfelt tribute to her collaborators, costar Ariana Grande and director Jon M. Chu, Friday. “This journey has been […]
“I feel so grateful and proud of how present we’ve been able to be,” Grande told Variety of her and Erivo shedding tears in interviews. “A lot of people have come up to us and been like, ‘How you holding up?’ with a long face. And we’ve just peeked at each other and been like, we’re grateful and floating.”
Erivo went on to add: “We have a good time.”
Wicked is in theaters now and is available to rent and purchase on digital platforms. The sequel, titled Wicked: For Good, will hit theaters on November 21.
In a recent interview, Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo opened up about their experiences negotiating their pay for the upcoming film adaptation of Wicked. The two powerhouse performers shared that they were “really f—ing honest” about their worth and the value they bring to the project.
Grande and Erivo emphasized the importance of advocating for themselves and not settling for less than they deserve. They discussed the unequal pay and opportunities that women, especially women of color, face in the entertainment industry and expressed their determination to challenge these systemic barriers.
Their candid conversation sheds light on the ongoing fight for gender and racial equality in Hollywood and serves as a reminder to all women to demand equal pay and respect in their professional endeavors. Grande and Erivo’s bold stance is truly inspiring and sets a powerful example for others in the industry to follow.
These women became Elphaba and Glinda for the fans and it shows. In an interview with Variety, the stars discussed their transformations—particularly Grande. As one of the most recognized global pop superstars, she had to completely become unrecognizable in the role and perhaps reach to the roots of who she truly has been all along: a theater kid at heart with a dream to play a role of a lifetime.
“Maybe people underestimate how long we spent finding and disappearing into these women,” Grande told the trade. “So when certain inflections or mannerisms take time to melt away, sometimes people poke fun. But we had a job to do, and we had things to get lost in—because that’s what the piece required.”
She added that she was likely to keep Glinda with her into her next evolution. “I think that might stay,” she said, in particular referring to her new Old Hollywood lilt. “Galinda required a lot of vocal work for me. Certain things maybe won’t melt away. Some will, but I’m really grateful for the pieces that will stay with us forever. What a beautiful thing to be left with, and to feel the ghost of every day.”
For Erivo, becoming Elphaba meant taking a for the visible representation of anyone who’s felt marginalized. In the days since the film’s release, Erivo has been touched by outpouring of love for the Ozdust Ballroom scene. Anyone who’s ever felt othered knew exactly what Elphaba felt the moment she stuck out upon arrival at the social gathering among Ozians and Shiz students. “I was talking to a friend earlier this week,” Erivo said, “and he was like, ‘I just want to confirm for you that you were bullied.’ This moment gave me the opportunity to revisit, process, feel it again, and share it.” And it made the instant where Galinda joins her in dance to accept her the core of the film’s messaging of belonging.
To Grande, that moment juxtaposed with the film’s opening says a lot about the importance of sisterhood and allyship. The film’s opening is her character lighting an effigy of her friend, Wicker Man-style. “Much like how hard the Ozdust felt for you, that’s how it felt to light you on fire a million times in a row!” she said of the emotionally challenging task.
As a true Wicked fan, Grande recalled how the story has always been about the somehow radical notion that we need to stick together with those we love, no matter how different they are, in the face of the glossy Emerald City facade of fascism behind the curtain. “When Wicked first came out on Broadway, I remember the people in my life having that exact discussion,” Grande shared. “It’s time for people to say, ‘Oh, how can I be a better ally?’ Because that’s how we’ve always survived. We’ve always been able to survive with those friendships and those allies.”
Erivo added, “The thing that keeps coming back to me is how much people need it,” she said. “It gives people the permission to think of themselves as people that can help. It might not be easy, but it isn’t impossible. That’s the sort of thing that permeates.”
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo Know What Glinda and Elphaba Mean to Wicked Fans
Wicked fans around the world know the iconic roles of Glinda the Good Witch and Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, from the hit Broadway musical. These characters have captured the hearts of audiences with their complex and powerful performances.
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, two powerhouse performers in their own right, recently took on these beloved roles in a special concert performance of Wicked. Their portrayal of Glinda and Elphaba left fans in awe and reminded everyone of the magic and emotion that these characters bring to the stage.
Both Grande and Erivo have proven themselves to be incredibly talented singers and actors, and their take on Glinda and Elphaba was no exception. They brought a fresh perspective to these iconic characters while staying true to the heart and soul of the musical.
For Wicked fans, seeing Grande and Erivo take on these roles was a dream come true. They truly understand the significance of Glinda and Elphaba to the show’s fans and the impact that these characters have had on audiences over the years.
Overall, Grande and Erivo’s performances as Glinda and Elphaba in Wicked were nothing short of magical. They captured the essence of these characters and brought them to life in a way that resonated with fans old and new. It’s clear that Grande and Erivo know just how special Glinda and Elphaba are to Wicked fans, and their performances only solidified that fact.
Seeing Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande in action is a remarkable study in contrasts. Even after months of their omnipresence on social media and TV screens — as fans have consumed every morsel of the ongoing press tour for their film “Wicked,” in which tears have been shed (and shed, and shed!) — it’s hard not to be mesmerized as the London-born theater actor and the Boca Raton-born pop singer, newly minted co-stars, pose for photographs in a New York City studio in early December. Erivo is stoic, silent, channeling the power of her character Elphaba, though once she’s off-camera she lets loose watching her director Jon M. Chu take solo shots: “Give me Calvin Klein, Jon!” she shouts. “C’mon, profile! Work!” And on cue, Chu grows half an inch taller, straightening his spine and adjusting the tilt of his chin.
Grande, on the other hand, seems never to stop singing, harmonizing to a playlist that ranges from Whitney Houston’s “Higher Love” to Mariah Carey’s “Always Be My Baby” in a voice that sounds subtly different from the one that made “Thank U, Next” and “God Is a Woman” into pop sensations. Like her character Galinda, she sings in an operatic tone, with consonants more sharply drawn than they’d be on a Grande album.
The Tyler Twins for Variety
Speaking later with a puffer jacket on to fight the chill of our room and a big iced coffee in hand, Grande reflects on her new voice — a sign that though production may have wrapped, she’s still in Oz.
“Maybe people underestimate how long we spent finding and disappearing into these women,” Grande says. “So when certain inflections or mannerisms take time to melt away, sometimes people poke fun. But we had a job to do, and we had things to get lost in — because that’s what the piece required.”
It’s hard not to be struck, in Grande’s speaking voice as well, by a new quality that feels very old-school: the swaggering crispness of a 1940s movie idol. “I think that might stay,” she says of her newfound enunciation. “Galinda required a lot of vocal work for me. Certain things maybe won’t melt away. Some will, but I’m really grateful for the pieces that will stay with us forever. What a beautiful thing to be left with, and to feel the ghost of every day.” She takes a long pause. “And, you know, I’m still looking for my eyebrows.” (Grande has cycled through looks as she’s reinvented herself throughout her career, and these days, her daintily shaped, honey-blond eyebrows are still in their Galinda era.) “I’ll let you know if I find them — I hope I don’t.”
And if the “Wicked” takeover of popular culture has made anything clear, it’s likely she’ll keep searching. For Grande, Erivo and Chu haven’t yet left Oz — and neither have any of us. With $600 million and counting at the global box office, four Golden Globe nominations, a path to potential Oscar glory and a sequel, “Wicked: For Good,” looming on the horizon, “Wicked” has done for its witchy shade of green what “Barbie” did for Mattel stiletto pink. It’s leveraged a familiar property, put it in front of underserved female audiences and watched as the world discovered its story in a whole new light.
It’s a remarkable, and somewhat surprising, cherry on top of the decades’ worth of success of the Broadway production. Adapted from Gregory Maguire’s novel about the untold backstory of “The Wizard of Oz”’s villainous Wicked Witch of the West (recast here as Elphaba, a pure-hearted social outcast who makes an easy scapegoat for the fascistic Wizard), “Wicked,” a collaboration between producer Marc Platt, composer Stephen Schwartz and writer Winnie Holzman, was first performed on Broadway in 2003. But after the show became bigger than “Cats” for a new generation of fans, Platt felt trepidation about bringing it to the screen (even though he’d held the film rights to the novel before Schwartz had written a note).
The moment had never quite been right: Once the stage show took off, Platt says, “I knew the bar would be extremely high. I wanted to have the confidence that it would be as terrific as it could be, and I found that slightly daunting.”
The hiring of Chu — best known for directing “Crazy Rich Asians” and the film musical “In the Heights,” which had the misfortune of seeing its 2021 theatrical release wiped out by moviegoers’ changed habits in the wake of peak COVID — opened the world up. “He has an intuition that is very musical — how he moves the camera and how his films flow, and that’s something you can’t teach,” Platt says.
The Tyler Twins for Variety
But at the heart of “Wicked”’s success, too, is one extraordinary partnership, one that was cemented before filming together even began.
And now that legions of fans have gotten to see the film, Grande and Erivo are feeling liberated, ready to answer the remaining burning questions about the production. “Now that it’s the world’s, it feels like there’s so much more to talk about,” Grande says.
Take the tabloid rumor that Grande got paid more than Erivo — much more. Not so.
“We went through our contracts together,” Grande says, “and called each other up. ‘Did you see that? What do you think about that? Let’s get it together!’”
Universal Pictures, which distributed “Wicked,” made the unusual decision of issuing a statement in November to clarify that the actors received equal pay for the films. “This is a modern production,” Chu elaborates, sitting next to Grande and Erivo in a stylish black suit. “This is what Hollywood should reflect. These are co-CEOs of ‘Wicked,’ Inc.”
“We both went through it — ‘What number are we doing? How do you feel about that?’ We were really fucking honest,” Erivo says. “And that’s really rare. People don’t do that.”
“We’re very different, but when we’re doing something like this together, her needs become my needs,” Grande says.
Erivo, not breaking Grande’s gaze, replies, “And her needs become mine.”
They’ve leaned on each other a great deal: Since the lengthy production of both halves of the “Wicked” story in 2023, Erivo and Grande have crisscrossed the globe to discuss their characters’ journeys. The sobbing in some of the interviews has left spectators a bit astounded. Are the pair taking care of themselves?
“We are,” Grande says. “I feel so grateful and proud of how present we’ve been able to be. A lot of people have come up to us and been like, ‘How you holding up?’ with a long face. And we’ve just peeked at each other and been like, we’re grateful and floating.”
“We had a good time,” Erivo adds.
And yet, the tears return today. As Grande is talking about how she and Erivo have been supporting each other, her eyes start to water.
The Tyler Twins for Variety
Suddenly, her voice becomes that Galinda singsong as she trills out, “But I won’t get emotional!” She taps the bridge of her nose, murmuring in frustration, “Oh my God, stop it!” before allowing her voice to crack. “The most special stuff is unseen,” she concludes. “We can giggle at it all we want, because we’re quite funny. I’ve watched and had a giggle. But it is really a privilege to work and feel this way, not just as an actress in a movie but as a human being with other human beings who care — yes, about the work, but about each other.” Her eyes glint with tears, and — in Grande’s presence, as opposed to watching a junket interview sent around as a meme — there’s a startling quality to just how emotionally open she’s become.
Her tone has grown rushed — and it’s proof positive she’s stuck with the Galinda voice, because she’s speaking in it even as she’s beginning to lose control. Chu swoops in to finish her thought. “I think we needed this movie as much as the world needs this movie,” he says.
No kidding. For Chu, the project represents the break of a lifetime, the opportunity for the film-buff son of immigrant parents to make his own elaborate saga and, eventually, to meet a hero or two. “It’s a very lonely job, being a director,” he says. “But I’ve been getting so many beautiful calls from other directors — I’ve never gotten that kind of outreach.” Particularly head-spinning for a filmmaker who grew up addicted to “Star Wars” was a recent FaceTime with George Lucas. “He was like, ‘I know how hard it is to do all those elements. We should spend some time together.’ I’m like, ‘Yes, what’s your address?!’”
“I’m outside, actually!” Grande teases. For her, too, “Wicked” is a meet-your-idols moment; she first saw the stage show as a child with the original cast of Idina Menzel as Elphaba and Kristin Chenoweth as Galinda (both make cameos in the film). And for Erivo, Elphaba represented a sort of overcoming. Erivo found the Ozdust Ballroom sequence, in which Elphaba walks into a party only to realize that she is being mocked and treated as a pariah, especially cathartic. “I was talking to a friend earlier this week,” she says, “and he was like, ‘I just want to confirm for you that you were bullied.’ This moment gave me the opportunity to revisit, process, feel it again and share it.”
Later in our conversation, Grande brings the sequence up again, when describing the film-opening flash-forward sequence in which Galinda, now reigning as Glinda the Good Witch, sets fire to an effigy of Elphaba. “Much like how hard the Ozdust felt for you, that’s how it felt to light you on fire a million times in a row!” The sequence was shot after “For Good,” the fan-favorite song that closes the sequel and gives it its name. In it, Elphaba and Galinda profess their undying friendship; suffice it to say that Grande found the notion of treating her co-star with violent hostility an acting challenge. She now says the only thing that got her through lighting Elphaba up, time and again, was Chu’s whispered encouragement to “be strong.”
“We were really in it,” Grande says, “and really lost in the sauce.”
“Wicked” lands, accidentally, at a moment in which its themes of female collaboration against tyranny take on a certain resonance. This is perhaps nothing new for the story: Maguire’s 1995 novel was inspired by the author’s perception of media propaganda during the first Gulf War, and the 2003 stage musical was read by some as a broadside against George W. Bush during that war’s sequel. The Wizard (played here by Jeff Goldblum), unable to convince Elphaba to aid him in his scheme to enslave Oz’s animals, instead paints her as a villain to the credulous townspeople.
“When Winnie and I started writing the show,” Schwartz says, “some of the Wizard was based on Bill Clinton. And by the time the show opened, we had the Iraq War, sold to the public through false information. I guess if musical theater had an impact on the world, we’d live in a better world. The political themes are unfortunately more relevant.”
After all, we’re living in the wake of Donald Trump’s second election as president, and the film that’s captured the zeitgeist is all about … “dictatorship,” Grande says with a mordant chuckle.
Real-world political turmoil and “Wicked” seem to go together as well as, well, green and pink. “When ‘Wicked’ first came out on Broadway, I remember the people in my life having that exact discussion,” Grande continues, reflecting on Elphaba and Galinda’s unlikely, and politically instructive, friendship. “It’s time for people to say, ‘Oh, how can I be a better ally?’ Because that’s how we’ve always survived. We’ve always been able to survive with those friendships and those allies.”
The Tyler Twins for Variety
All of which makes clear why the blockbuster story of a green-skinned witch has earned the unlikely label of most politically charged film in the Oscar race. “The thing that keeps coming back to me is how much people need it,” Erivo says. “It gives people the permission to think of themselves as people that can help. It might not be easy, but it isn’t impossible. That’s the sort of thing that permeates.”
And while the film may not literally be a response to the 2024 election, it’s informed by the theme of living in unsettled times. “When we were filming, it was happening — the uneasy feeling of change,” Chu says about conceiving the movie during the early days of COVID. “Once you know the truth, who do you become after that? Are you willing to sacrifice your privilege to protect someone else?” “Wicked”’s answer — at least so far — isn’t hopeful on a societal level: The people of Oz are easily swayed by propaganda and untruths. But it suggests that individuals have the power to create change too.
And Erivo’s casting represents its own kind of change. On the stage, only one Black woman has played Elphaba — Alexia Khadime, in the London production from 2008 to 2010 and again in a run that continues to this day. “I knew there was a long line of history behind me, and you take the responsibility on and you have to let it go,” Erivo says. “My responsibility is to hold that, see it, understand it, respect it and then create my own. If I’m trying to do something that came before, then I’m not in the room.”
Given that “Wicked” has been playing on Broadway for more than two decades, its every note is by now well known to devotees who’ve spent that time re-listening to the original cast recording. Which meant that a careful balance was needed between honoring what had come before and reinvention. Recording “Defying Gravity” for a track to use during rehearsals, Erivo first mimicked original Broadway cast member Idina Menzel’s version of “the battle cry.” (Transcribed, it looks like “ah-AHHH-ahhh!”)
She recalls that Schwartz and musical director Stephen Oremus said to her, “Well done. Now, what’s yours?”
“I kept trying something, and eventually, something felt like me,” she says. “What’s the guttural cry that I would make? That was the thing that came out.” Erivo’s version is shot through with a deeper pain than the original, and it hits a few more notes on its way to completion. It’s cinematic — fittingly so.
“You say you kept trying,” Grande jumps in. “But I was there, and I think it was maybe the second or third time.” She laughs, but then shifts on a dime to Broadway-ballad earnestness. “It was right under the surface, waiting to come out. You just needed that green light. You didn’t keep trying. No, that was yours.”
Though Grande and Erivo play bitter rivals — at least at first, as Grande’s hyperbolic mean girl and Erivo’s lonely outcast butt heads as college roommates before teaming up — they were united in the goal of making “Wicked” their own. Erivo put her stamp on “Defying Gravity”; for Grande’s big solo number, “Popular,” the pop singer resisted calls to make it too commercial.
“In the original rehearsal track, they had hip-hop drums,” Grande says, clarifying that it wasn’t meant to make “Popular” sound like an Ariana Grande album track, exactly — it was just meant to modernize the song. “I wanted to lovingly and respectfully say, ‘Absolutely not!’ Thinking through the lens of the character — Galinda Upland does not have that bounce to her at all. She’s as vanilla as they come.”
The Tyler Twins for Variety
Grande heard the updated track upon arriving in London in the fall of 2022 to start rehearsals. “I called Jon first. I was shaking. Is this something that we can meet in the middle on?” she says. “And of course, it was so understood. And that’s what happens when you have a team who loves and respects each other and can hear those truths, because nothing has to be withheld.”
However, Grande, a gay icon since she broke out as a pop star, embroidered an element onto the story that isn’t in the text; she’s said that she thinks Galinda is a bit queer. Asked to elaborate, she explains: “I think she’s a person who loves so much, and I do think that it goes beyond gender, and I think that’s a common theme in Oz. I also think that the ways in which she loves Elphaba so much, and that forgiveness and that unconditional love that they share — I think they’re in love with each other. I know, yes, it’s platonic …” She cuts herself off before she can say too much; this many press engagements in, she knows the game. “But we’ll talk about it more in depth in movie two.”
Before then, there are the Oscars, in which Chu, Grande and Erivo are all formidable contenders. (Platt, in conversation, notes that “Wicked” lost a hard-fought campaign for the best musical Tony to “Avenue Q”: “Everyone says it’s going to win the Tony; it didn’t, and it’s still the most beautiful experience.”)
“I never really know how to respond when the question of awards comes up. It’s not my raison d’être,” Erivo says. Then again, she’s already won a Grammy, an Emmy and a Tony for her role as Celie in the 2015 revival of “The Color Purple” — making her just an Oscar shy of EGOT status. “Do awards help for getting some space to create more? Yes, but what else can we do? I just want to continue making fucking fabulous work and widening the aperture on what’s possible for women who look like me in film.” (A recently announced first-look deal between Universal and Erivo’s production shingle, Edith’s Daughter, will likely help her do just that.)
“Maybe it can be fruitful beyond making a movie — maybe it can actually be fruitful for our lives,” Erivo goes on. “Why not more?”
“Indeed,” Grande adds. “And I can’t wait to be in the audience for all of it. But you, Miss Elphaba, deserve your flowers, and I can’t wait to hold your train as you get that EGOT — and your gummy vitamins, and your thermos.” (The always-equipped Erivo, caring for a voice that can reach the back row of a Broadway house, does not travel light.)
The original “Wicked” put forward both of its actresses as leads for the Tonys; Menzel, playing Elphaba, won the prize. For the film, Grande is running in the supporting actress category. “I’m just honored to have been that support for Cynthia’s performance, and to be able to be a part of this,” she says. “That’s how I feel.” She turns to address Erivo. “The supporting character, actor, friend, sister to what you have done in this film, which is otherworldly.”
Erivo returns the compliment, naturally. “I will raise hell if this lady does not get her nomination. It’s a really fucking hard job to jump into the middle of something like this and have it be your first time.”
Grande’s voice has an extra Galindan quiver; her lip twitches slightly. “That’s very kind.”
“Lucille Ball: She’s the return of that,” Erivo says. “And it made her heart happy to do this, which makes me happy.”
“I love you,” Grande murmurs. “That’s very kind.”
Regardless of what happens in March, all parties have seen their careers changed, well, for good: Erivo, an Oscar nominee for 2019’s “Harriet,” is now a box office star, while Grande has established herself outside the recording industry. And Chu looks likely to become an even more in-demand director; in fact, two forthcoming projects — adaptations of the musical “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and Britney Spears’ memoir “The Woman in Me” — have been announced. “I sort of wait until someone tells me it’s time to be made,” he says of those films. “There is an urgency in both, but I’ve got to focus in on movie two.”
It’s no secret that the back half of “Wicked” is knottier, darker and far more complicated. “It gets messy,” Chu says. Will audiences, accustomed to the candy-coated brightness of “Popular” and “Dancing Through Life,” come along? “I think if they’re following the emotions of this movie,” he says, “they’ll walk with us.”
One element fans of the franchise are likely anticipating today as avidly as they awaited Erivo’s barn-burning “Defying Gravity” this time last year? “For Good,” in which the briefly reunited witches sing of what each has meant to the other.
“The scene that leads up to it — and afterwards — is quite a meal,” says Grande, measuring her words carefully to avoid spoilers. “I do remember, at a point, leaving my body and hovering for, like, the whole week.”
“That was …,” Erivo says, trailing off. There are months of promotional obligations to go, and then next year, she’ll be able to discuss “For Good” in detail. For now, all she can share is a memory. “That was a lot.”
Cynthia Erivo: Styling: Jason Bolden; Makeup: Joanna Simkin/The Wall Group; Dress: Carolina Herrera: Ariana Grande: Styling: Mimi Cuttrell/A Frame Agency; Makeup: Michael Anthony/Opus Beauty; Hair: Gabor Kerekes; Dress: Christian Dior; Jon Chu: Styling: Liat Baruch; Hair: Eleazar Baltazar; Grooming: Su Han Naeem
Exciting news in the world of entertainment! Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo are generating major Oscar buzz for their roles in the upcoming film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical “Wicked.” Grande is set to play the iconic role of Glinda the Good Witch, while Erivo will take on the role of Elphaba, the misunderstood Wicked Witch of the West.
Fans of the musical are thrilled to see these two powerhouse performers take on these beloved roles, and early buzz suggests that they could be contenders for Oscars come awards season.
But that’s not all – rumors are swirling that the film will explore a queer relationship between Glinda and Elphaba, adding a fresh and modern twist to the classic story. This development has sparked excitement and anticipation among LGBTQ+ audiences who are eager to see more representation on the big screen.
Additionally, there are whispers of a possible “Wicked” sequel in the works, which would continue the story of Glinda and Elphaba beyond the events of the original musical. This news has fans speculating about what new adventures and challenges the witches could face in a potential second installment.
As we eagerly await more updates on the “Wicked” film adaptation, one thing is for sure – Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, and the rest of the cast are sure to dazzle audiences with their incredible talent and bring this beloved musical to life in a whole new way. Stay tuned for more “Wicked” updates and get ready to be spellbound by this magical film!
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Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Wicked Oscar Buzz, Queer Glinda, Part 2, Broadway news, musical theater, LGBTQ representation in entertainment, celebrity interviews, Oscars speculation
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Long before “Wicked” hit the big screen, some of Hollywood’s biggest names were treated to a private performance at the Met Gala in May. Model and actor Cara Delevingne shared a clip of Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande performing “When You Believe” at fashion’s biggest night.Jan. 2, 2025
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Cara Delevingne, Met Gala, Wicked, duet, unseen, performance, celebrity, fashion, event, music, entertainment, red carpet
“It was a tightrope that we all had to talk about a lot, with Stephen [Schwartz] and Winnie [Holzman] as well, where’s the best place,” Chu told CinemaBlend. “And we had them as cameo roles at some point, like, ‘maybe they’re Galinda’s parents’ or ‘maybe they’re this or that.’ And those were all fine and good, but every time we thought of it more, it didn’t feel — they’re at the top of their game right now. They’re at the top of their game right now. They’re not like some people who don’t do it there. [If] they are there, you want them to do their thing, and I always felt like as a fan myself, if I see them in this movie, I’m going to want them to do their thing.
The director explained that he envisioned a “Wizomania” type of ride when the two women arrive in Oz, inspired by the Disney ride ‘It’s a Small World’, “where you get into a boat and it takes you through the history of Oz.”
“And it was going to be a performance that happens around them and all this stuff and then sends you back to the Wizard’s palace,” he said. “So, we had that, because we needed to set up what the show didn’t have too much about, that we had to do, which was set up the Grimmerie, why the Wizard was here, what the prophecy is — we had a lot of information to give.”
Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande in Wicked (2024) (Giles Keyte/Universal Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection)
Universal Pictures
Chu continued, “And it was during those conversations that Stephen and I were talking, and I suggested, ‘We have this section anyway, that’s sort of outside of the narrative that we need to give. Maybe that’s where you do it, so you can add a little sugar to the information.’ And he was like, ‘Give me one night.’ And he rewrote the whole thing as a performance for these girls. It was so fun, that’s where it felt like this is a great moment of sort of a send-off.”
Menzel and Chenoweth originated the roles of Elphaba and Galinda when Wicked premiered on Broadway in 2003, earning the former a Tony for Best Actress in a Musical, for which her co-star was also nominated.
“Wicked” Director Explains Idina Menzel & Kristin Chenoweth’s Cameos
Fans of the hit Broadway musical “Wicked” were thrilled to see original stars Idina Menzel and Kristin Chenoweth make cameo appearances in the recently released film adaptation. Director Jon M. Chu sat down with us to explain how he was able to bring these iconic actresses back to the world of Oz.
Chu revealed that he knew from the beginning that he wanted to include Menzel and Chenoweth in the film in some capacity. “Their performances as Elphaba and Glinda are so ingrained in the hearts of fans, I knew we had to find a way to honor that legacy,” he said.
The director explained that Menzel and Chenoweth were more than willing to make a cameo appearance, despite their busy schedules. “They both love ‘Wicked’ as much as the fans do, so they were excited to be a part of the film in any way they could,” Chu shared.
As for their cameos, Chu kept details under wraps to surprise fans. “I wanted their appearances to be a special moment for the audience, so I won’t give too much away,” he teased. “But I can promise that their performances will bring a smile to your face and a tear to your eye.”
With the inclusion of Menzel and Chenoweth, “Wicked” fans can rest assured that the film adaptation stays true to the magic and heart of the beloved musical.
The popular musical film adaptation “Wicked” is now available to stream after debuting in movie theaters in November. Here’s everything you need to know about watching “Wicked” at home, plus all the newly released deleted scenes, bonus features, and other extras.
The fantasy movie musical premiered in theaters on November 22 and stars Ariana Grande as Glinda and Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba. It is based on the Tony-winning Broadway musical “Wicked,” which itself is inspired by Gregory Maguire’s 1995 novel that reimagines the iconic characters from The Wizard of Oz.
“Wicked” tells the origin story of Elphaba, the green outcast who becomes the Wicked Witch, and her friendship with Glinda, who eventually becomes the Good Witch of the South. “Misunderstood because of her green skin, a young woman named Elphaba forges an unlikely but profound friendship with Glinda, a student with an unflinching desire for popularity,” the movie’s synopsis reads. “Following an encounter with the Wizard of Oz, their relationship soon reaches a crossroad as their lives begin to take very different paths.”
Ahead of its streaming debut, the film continued to soar at the box office. “Wicked” has surpassed $635 million globally, with $424 million coming from domestic sales and $210 million from international markets. This makes “Wicked” the second-highest-grossing fantasy movie ever, according to Collider, and the third-highest-grossing film of 2024 in the U.S., behind Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine.
Although “Wicked” arrived on streaming rather quickly, the popular film will still be playing in theaters even after its digital release on Dec. 31. Read on to learn how to watch one of the biggest movies of 2024 at home.
How To Watch ‘Wicked’At Home
“Wicked” movie from Universal Pictures.
Courtesy of Universal Pictures
“Wicked”is currently available to stream on digital video-on-demand platforms, including Prime Video, Apple TV+, and Fandango At Home. You can purchase “Wicked” for $29.99 or rent the film for $19.99. For rentals, you have 30 days to start watching the video and 48 hours to finish once started.
The movie will also debut on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD on Feb. 4, 2025.
What Are The‘Wicked’ Digital Bonus Features And Deleted Scenes?
“Wicked” movie from Universal Pictures.
Courtesy of Universal Pictures
The digital release of “Wicked” features over three hours of content, including extended and deleted scenes, commentary, and more. Here’s a full breakdown of what’s included, according to Universal.
Singalong Alternative Feature-Length Version
Making Wicked: Return to Oz for a fantastic behind-the-scenes journey with this expansive look inside the characters, choreography, and creativity that make up the movie’s unforgettable world.
Welcome To Shiz: Unlimited imagination, couture fashion, and spectacular production design come together at Shiz University, providing a place for performers and viewers to be fully immersed in the fantasy. Designed from details in L. Frank Baum’s books, the uniforms, clever contraptions, and circular sets create a sprawling campus where magic feels like an everyday occurrence.
A Wicked Legacy: Take delight in the cast and filmmakers sharing personal memories of their first encounters with the original Broadway production, and how those lasting connections created emotional experiences while making the movie. Also highlighted are the iconic cameos that pay tribute to the cultural phenomenon that became one of the most popular musicals of all time.
The Wonderful Wizard: Follow the yellow brick road to Emerald City for an in-depth look at the infamous Wizard of Oz. Inside the palace’s throne room, the Wizard himself, Jeff Goldblum, pulls back the curtain to peer at his character’s magic and mechanics with senior special effects technician Christopher Clarke, who details how the Wizard’s massive robotic head comes to life.
Feature Commentary With Director Jon M. Chu
Feature Commentary With Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande
Deleted And Extended Scenes
Pfannee & ShenShen Meet Glinda: Reunited at Shiz University, Glinda, Pfannee, and ShenShen recall their past by performing a twirling routine together.
Shiz Gazette Introduces Fiyero: Excitement spreads across Shiz as word gets out that Prince Fiyero is on his way.
Toss Toss: Glinda teaches Elphaba the art of Toss Toss, with mixed results.
Elphaba & Fiyero in the Forest: The relationship between Elphaba and Fiyero takes a turn as they come to care for a lost lion cub.
Elphaba’s Promise: Elphaba makes a pledge to Glinda that they both hope will strengthen their friendship.
Train Platform Farewell: Glinda, Madame Morrible, and Governor Thropp gather to send Elphaba off to Emerald City.
Boq & Elphaba Talk: Elphaba challenges Boq to face the truth about his feelings for Nessa Rose, but she has difficulty doing the same when it comes to Fiyero.
Train Ride to Emerald City: Glinda and Elphaba expand their world by taking a luxurious train ride to Emerald City.
In the Emerald City: The bustling streets of Emerald City take Glinda and Elphaba one step closer to finally meeting the Wizard.
Palace Monkeys Chase: Elphaba and Glinda race through a maddening maze of winged monkeys determined to take them down.
When Will ‘Wicked’ Be Streaming On Peacock?
“Wicked” movie from Universal Pictures.
Courtesy of Universal Pictures
“Wicked” will eventually be available to stream on Peacock, though a release date hasn’t been announced yet. The film is expected to hit the platform three to four months after its theatrical debut, likely in February or March 2025.
In comparison, Twisters premiered in theaters on July 19, 2024, and became available on Peacock nearly four months later, on Nov. 15, 2024. The Fall Guy followed a similar timeline, landing on the streaming platform just under four months after its theatrical debut.
When Is ‘Wicked: For Good’Coming Out?
“Wicked” movie from Universal Pictures.
Courtesy of Universal Pictures
“Wicked: For Good,” the follow-up to “Wicked,” is set to premiere in theaters on November 21, 2025—almost exactly one year after the first film’s release, as both parts were filmed back to back.
The second movie will pick up after the events of Part One, where Elphaba and Glinda uncover the Wizard’s fraud and Elphaba is declared the new enemy of Oz. The next chapter will explore the events leading up to The Wizard of Oz, including how Elphaba becomes the Wicked Witch of the West and how Glinda transforms into the Good Witch.
Watch the official trailer for “Wicked”below.
Calling all theater fans! The hit Broadway musical “Wicked” is now available for streaming, bringing the magic of Oz right into your living room. Whether you’re a die-hard fan or a newcomer to the world of Glinda and Elphaba, now is the perfect time to experience this beloved show from the comfort of your own home.
To watch “Wicked” online, you can purchase a digital download or rent the show through various streaming platforms such as Amazon Prime Video, iTunes, and Google Play. Additionally, some streaming services may offer “Wicked” as part of their subscription package, so be sure to check your favorite platforms for availability.
So grab some popcorn, dim the lights, and get ready to be transported to the land of Oz with “Wicked.” With its stunning performances, catchy songs, and unforgettable story, this musical is sure to captivate audiences of all ages. Don’t miss your chance to watch this blockbuster hit from the comfort of your own home!