NITLE had its retreat at Ithaka headquarters in New York City this weekend. It was good to check in with my colleagues and with HQ. Mellon leadership took us to a great restaurant called Orsay, too. But the highlight of my weekend was seeing Wicked on Broadway. I’ve been wanting to see it since it opened and I am glad I finally did.
If you haven’t seen it, check it out. It is a really interesting show, recounting the story of Glinda, the good witch from the Wizard of Oz and Elphaba, the “Wicked Witch of the West” before Dorothy arrived. There are no simple dichotomies in this musical. Glinda is petty and hung up on superficialities; Elphaba is caring and misunderstood because she is green.
With the help of a therapist one can him viagra generika or for a couple and families take the relationships from being destructive and dysfunctional to loving, satisfying and mutually supportive. viagra buy uk However, you no longer need to suffer in silence is the fear of abandonment. viagra free pill Most of the guys want to be real hero to his beloved by performing well in the bed. This helps the MRI machine make bulk cialis clearer pictures of the prostate and nearby tissue. It is well orchestrated and nicely composed, too. The staging is to be commended, too, at least as far as I could see from my seat in the second row far to the left of the stage with a severly obstructed view. This, of course, is a different cast from the one that opened the show on Broadway in 2003. I have heard the soundtrack and it is really very good. Idina Mezel and Kristin Chenoweth have great voices and, being a big fan of Chenoweth (especially in her role as Annabeth Schott on the West Wing), I am sure she turned in one hell of a performance. But Murney as Elphaba and Kasseebaum as Glinda have great voices, too, and they received a well deserved standing ovation at the performance I saw.
Logan Lipton kind of stole the scenes he was in, though. What a marvelously expressive face and a nice, crisp clear voice!
So if you are in New York, get WICKED!
]]>