Sexy Wicked Melanie Review

Elphaba sacrifices her entire adolescence for Nessarose. She builds her sister a wheelchair (magically imbued). She gives up her chance at freedom to care for her. And how does Nessa repay her? By becoming a tyrant.

Because she never receives this validation, she enters every subsequent relationship with a desperate grit: If I am useful, I will be loved. If I sacrifice myself, I will be worthy. The most debated, analyzed, and adored relationship in Wicked is the one between Elphaba (Melanie) and Glinda (Galinda). Is it friendship? Is it a queer romance censored by the 1930s setting of the Oz timeline? Or is it something far more painful—a love that could have been, had the world not demanded they choose sides? "What is this feeling? So sudden and new." The show famously opens with "What Is This Feeling?"—a vaudevillian anthem to loathing. But the musical’s irony is its thesis. The aggressive, rhythmic nature of their hatred is coded language for an overwhelming attraction they cannot process. They share a room. They touch each other’s hair (violently, then gently). They see each other naked, metaphorically and literally. Sexy Wicked Melanie

Elphaba asks Glinda to let her go. She asks Glinda to carry the legacy. And Glinda, who never stops loving Elphaba, agrees to marry into the system that killed her. Elphaba sacrifices her entire adolescence for Nessarose