}} English actress
Cynthia Erivo and American singer and actress
Ariana Grande performed a rendition of "Defying Gravity" as Elphaba and Glinda respectively in the
first part of
Universal Pictures'
two-part film adaptation of
Wicked, which was released on November 22, 2024. Their version of the song was released on the same day as part of the soundtrack album
Wicked: The Soundtrack (2024) by
Republic Records and
Verve Records. "Defying Gravity" was released to US
contemporary hit radio stations on December 3, 2024. The song won
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance at the
68th Annual Grammy Awards.
Composition The song appears as the concluding number of the film, with various score and scene extensions between the verses to work as a
cliffhanger ending. The climactic shot of the number, in which Elphaba does her signature "battle cry" while up in the air at sunset, sees her cape enlarge and billow in the wind to evoke the "
cherry picker" effect from the stage musical. Rather than ending with Elphaba's final verse, as it does on the radio edit, a score flourish inspired by the "Sunrise" portion of
Richard Strauss'
Also sprach Zarathustra (made famous by
2001: A Space Odyssey) was added at the suggestion of editor
Myron Kerstein, so that the song and film wouldn't end abruptly. In one of the film's trailers, the song was remixed with
Herbert Stothart's iconic
"Wicked Witch/Miss Gulch" motif from
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's 1939 film version of
The Wizard of Oz. The lyric "Get her!" from the original was changed to "Kill her!". Filming of the sequence was delayed by six months due to the
2023 SAG-AFTRA strike and took until about a year into production. Erivo stated that she viewed the song as a "massive journey" and wanted her character's voice to grow throughout the song. Regarding her battle cry at the end of the sequence, "I was always looking forward to that moment, just because everything builds to there. Your body and your brain and your mind – and your heart, really – are waiting to be able to release that one final note, because it’s the ultimate moment where [Elphaba] can become herself." A 14-minute video breakdown of Kerstein's editing of the sequence, with him analyzing his creative choices using the film's
Avid Media Composer timeline, was released on December 23, 2024. Kerstein would later repeat this demonstration in person at the 2025
NAB Show on April 5, 2025, during a conversation panel with him and cinematographer
Alice Brooks.
Critical reception Writing for
Billboard, Stephen Daw named "Defying Gravity" the best song of the soundtrack album and lauded Erivo's version as "one of the single best movie musical interpretations of a song that this reviewer has ever heard, and one that more than surpasses the already astronomical expectations surrounding it." He noted that the instrumental was largely unchanged from the original, leaving Erivo to put her own stamp on the song "in a way that makes you feel as though you’re hearing it for the first time." Daw praised her "awe-inspiring dexterity" in traversing her vocal range and letting the full set of emotions be heard through her voice, "wringing out every note for all it is worth" in the song's infamous bridge and battle cry. He also praised Grande's "necessary and vital assist" with her acting at the beginning of the song and her "gorgeous harmonies" in the middle. Likewise, Erivo was commended for her "raw emotion and power" by
The Daily Telegraph and her flawless delivery by
Variety's Chris Willman. Lisa Laman of
Looper named it one of the best movie scenes of 2024, writing "Lengthier pauses are incorporated throughout the song to allow Elphaba and Glinda more time to interact. Their dissipating friendship really hits home with these freshly concocted breaks. Where "Defying Gravity" really soars in its new qualities, though, is a segment in which Elphaba falls to the ground in Emerald City after she first attempts to fly, as past negative comments from others race through her mind. Watching Elphaba soar back up to the sky and finish up "Defying Gravity" is a tremendous sight. Erivo's powerful vocals and a dazzlingly bombastic instrumental accompaniment cap off this showstopper musical number on a glorious note."
Impact on popular culture On November 21, 2024, a clip from the press tour interview in which the journalist Tracey E. Gilchrist told Erivo and Grande that viewers were "
holding space" because the lyrics of "Defying Gravity" went
viral created multiple
Internet memes. Gilchrist later explained what she meant: "For me, it means being in the moment, not being distracted and feeling something on a cellular level ... I think you can hold space with lyrics of a song — one you've heard hundreds of times — and it can suddenly take on new meaning when you're a queer person." In December 2024, Universal Pictures commissioned a float based on the film to appear in the 2025
Rose Parade, with the float itself being named "Defying Gravity" after the song. On
New Year's Eve of that year, fans were urged to play the song at 11:53pm EST (9:28pm EST if viewing the film) in order to time Elphaba's battle cry with the stroke of midnight on January 1, 2025 to ring in the
New Year. The song was featured prominently in
London’s New Year’s Eve fireworks display for 2026 with Erivo providing a voice message over the track.
Live performances The song was performed by Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande to open the
97th Academy Awards ceremony as part of a medley of songs from
Wicked,
The Wizard of Oz and
The Wiz. Erivo also performed the song twice for the television special
Wicked: One Wonderful Night, which aired in November 2025.
Accolades Charts Certifications Release history ==See also==