Wicked received mostly positive reviews.
Publishers Weekly called it a "fantastical meditation on good and evil, God and free will" which combined "puckish humor and bracing pessimism."
Kirkus Reviews called it "A captivating, funny, and perceptive look at destiny, personal responsibility, and the not-always-clashing beliefs of faith and magic."
Library Journal recommended the book to "good readers who like satire, and love exceedingly imaginative and clever fantasy." The
Los Angeles Times favorably compared
Wicked with other "fantasy novels of ideas" such as
Gormenghast and
Dune.
The New York Times was a notable outlier, criticizing the novel's strident politics and moral relativism. Reviewer
Michiko Kakutani argued that Maguire "shows little respect for Baum's original story."
Wicked, she felt, "turns a wonderfully spontaneous world of fantasy into a lugubrious allegorical realm, in which everything and everyone is labeled with a topical name tag." In 2005, ten years after its publication,
Wicked spent 26 weeks on the
New York Times bestseller list. The novel has sold five million copies since its 1995 publication. ==Adaptations==
Musical In 2003, the novel was adapted as the Broadway musical
Wicked by composer/lyricist
Stephen Schwartz and librettist
Winnie Holzman. The musical was produced by
Universal Pictures and directed by
Joe Mantello, with musical staging by
Wayne Cilento. The Broadway production was followed by long-running productions in Chicago, San Francisco, and Los Angeles in the United States, as well as London, Germany, and Japan. It was nominated for ten
Tony Awards, winning three, and is the 4th longest-running Broadway show in history, with over 8,500 performances. The original Broadway production starred
Idina Menzel as Elphaba and
Kristin Chenoweth as Glinda.
Unproduced television program In a 2009 interview, Maguire stated that he had sold the rights to ABC to make an independent non-musical TV adaptation of
Wicked. It would not be based on
Winnie Holzman's script for the musical play. On January 9, 2011,
Entertainment Weekly reported that ABC would be teaming up with
Salma Hayek and her production company to create a TV miniseries of
Wicked based solely on Maguire's novel. The miniseries never entered production.
Films In September 2010,
Filmshaft disclosed that Universal Pictures was beginning work on a film adaptation of the stage musical. In December 2012, following the success of
Les Misérables,
Marc Platt, also a producer of the stage version, announced the film was going ahead, later confirming the film was aiming for a 2016 release. Universal announced in 2016 that the film would be released in theaters on December 22, 2021, with
Stephen Daldry directing. After production was shut down during the 2020
Coronavirus pandemic, and was replaced by
Jon M. Chu.
Cynthia Erivo and
Ariana Grande were cast as Elphaba and Galinda, respectively, with
Jonathan Bailey as Fiyero. The
first film of the two-part adaptation was released on November 22, 2024, and the
second film was released on November 21, 2025.
Graphic novel In March 2025, William Morrow Paperbacks published the first volume of a graphic novel adaptation of
Wicked, with illustrations by
Scott Hampton. ==References==