With his runaway hit, *Wicked*, conquering both Broadway and Hollywood, Gregory Maguire has found himself at home in a cultural phenomenon. As a central figure behind this magic, Maguire, who penned *Wicked* in 1995, recently shared his thoughts on how this fantasy mirrors today's political realities. It was an insightful discussion at an event organized by Fordham University's Center on Religion and Culture.
### From fiction's pages, reality's stage
"You know you're living in a strange time when an entire continent seems bathed in pink and green," Maguire mused, referring whimsically yet pointedly, tongue-in-cheek, at *Wicked*'s signature colors. "I'm living in my own fantasy bubble," he admitted, marveling at how his creation not only leapt from page and stage but spoke volumes around today's global audience.
During his talk, Maguire delved deep, explaining how his twist on Oz mirrors our current political weather. In *Wicked*, Oz's Wizard emerges as a charming yet autocratic figure, an uncanny echo we might hear resonating with modern leaders worldwide.
### Making sense in a complex universe
"I never set out with a crystal ball," Maguire revealed with a chuckle. "I wanted something retouched, old-timey. A shelf-life just long enough, then bye-bye, remainder pile." Yet, it seems his tale's dive, examining power plays, media spin, and moral murkiness, struck a nerve with audiences who see shades in today's society.
As he reminisced about his creative spark, Maguire traced *Wicked* right back—to reports during Gulf War One that painted Saddam Hussein in hues borrowed from history's own villains like Hitler. This sparked in him a fascination with how language can twist, turning mere words lethal.
### Unmasking a misunderstood witch
In writing *Wicked*, Maguire set out on a quest: Who exactly was this infamous Wicked Witch? He pondered, "Everyone knows her, but why exactly *is* she 'wicked'?" Through this view, he peeled back layers, questioning if "evil" was a label or misunderstanding.
Curiously introspective, Maguire voiced his restraint, wary not just using his witch as a thought experiment. "You can't pawn off your intellectual baggage onto her. Let her be," he advised. "She needs that space—to breathe and grapple her burdens, not carry mine."
### Gender, insight, and story layers
Maguire's musings drifted further toward storytelling choices—particularly, his penchant writing female leads. "Guys are misunderstood too, sure. But less captivating," he grinned. "Women and gay men, they hold paradoxes better than us straight types," he chuckled. This knack, he noted, adds richness, depth, a layered fabric weaving character and plot.
### Finding faith, fantasy, and harmony
Having grown up Catholic, Maguire shared personal insights on balancing faith with controversial church stances, especially on LGBTQ+ matters. A friend's quip about ‘cafeteria Catholicism' struck a chord he played wisely: "Yup, but what's left on my tray's my pick."
He spoke poetically, linking religion with fantasy—both brewing awe and wonder. "Magic reshapes experience subtly," he noted. "That transformation? It sparks awe—our recipe's core ingredient."
With each tale, Maguire enchants us anew, using magic and moral questions as a mirror. His reflections remind us how stories push us, challenging our notions, forcing a rethink—what's truly good, who truly evil?