In city branding United States of America The City of
Seattle has used "The Emerald City" as its official nickname since 1982. There is also a drink known as "Emerald City" that is associated with the city of Seattle.
Eugene, Oregon is also referred to as the Emerald City, and the region has been known as the "Emerald Empire" as early as 1928.
Greenville, North Carolina is called the Emerald City by locals and tourists alike. The city has an art loop in the uptown district that is called the emerald loop, and on New Years Eve, the city drops an Emerald in the Town Common Park.
Peter Kaplan, a media icon and the former editor of the
New York Observer, a newspaper that chronicled the city's political, financial and cultural elites, frequently referred to
New York as the "Emerald City."
Sydney, Australia In 1987,
David Williamson—whose brother-in-law scripted the musical film
Oz (1976)—wrote the play
Emerald City in which the character Elaine Ross describes
Sydney metaphorically as "the Emerald City of Oz." Sydney is where people go expecting their dreams to be fulfilled only to end up with superficial substitutes and broken dreams. In 2006, the annual
Sydney New Year's Eve was entitled "A Diamond Night in Emerald City", where the "Diamond Night" alluded to the
75th anniversary of the opening of the
Sydney Harbour Bridge. Subsequently, "Emerald City" has occasionally been used as an unofficial nickname for the City of Sydney. The head office of the Sydney-based merchant banking and private equity firm Emerald Partners is located on top of the
Museum of Contemporary Art Australia building on the Sydney Harbour foreshore, at
Circular Quay. The firm was named after Baum's book and the David Williamson play. Fittingly, the word "Oz" can refer to "Australia" in colloquial Australian speech. A long-running gossip column in the
Sydney Morning Herald, the city's flagship newspaper, is named "Emerald City."
Asia Muntinlupa is nicknamed as the "Emerald City of the
Philippines" by the
Department of Tourism.
In cinema & live production • The city appears in the film
The Wizard of Oz (1939), directed by
Victor Fleming. • The 1976 Australian musical
Oz is a reimagining of Baum's original story, set in 1970s Australia. • The 1978 musical
The Wiz, the plaza and main buildings of the
World Trade Center serve as the setting for the Emerald City. • The city appears in
Return to Oz, having been destroyed by the
Nome King with all of its inhabitants turned to stone. When Dorothy enters, she finds the city inhabited by Wheelers and ruled over by
Mombi. Upon retrieving the
ruby slippers from the Nome King, Dorothy uses their power to restore the Emerald City to its former glory. • The 1987 Australian play
Emerald City satirizes the entertainment industry and uses the Emerald City as a metaphor for
Sydney, Australia. Its
scenic design features heavy elements of
steampunk and pays visual homage to
Blade Runner (1982), according to co-creator Craig van Sickle. Likewise, the "
Outer Zone" (O.Z.) is described as a bleak rendition of the beautiful world of Oz. • The 2017
NBC TV series
Emerald City. • The Emerald City appears in
Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz In literature In
Gregory Maguire's
revisionist Oz novels,
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West (1995) and
Son of a Witch (2005), the Emerald City is a much darker place than in Baum's novels. It does have splendid palaces and gardens, but sections are also beset by
crime and
poverty.
Son of a Witch introduces Southstairs, an extensive political prison located in the caves below the Emerald City. The green glasses worn by the citizens are often used as a way to stop them from seeing what is going on around them.
In video games The video game
Emerald City Confidential (2009) portrays the Emerald City as a
film noir place with private detectives, widespread corruption, mob bosses, smugglers, and crooked lawyers. Set 40 years after the events of
The Wizard of Oz, its described as "Oz, seen through the eyes of
Raymond Chandler".
Other allusions The
Green Zone in Baghdad is sometimes ironically and cynically referred to as the
Emerald City. ==References==