9. The parallels between young kids asking tough questions.
Halfway through the "No One Mourns the Wicked" musical number in Wicked, a child emerges from the crowd and asks Glinda the big existential question that haunts this entire story: "Why does wickedness happen?"
"That's a good question," Glinda responds. "Are people born wicked? Or do they have wickedness thrust upon them?" She then goes on to tell the story of Elphaba's childhood and family.
Interestingly, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz author L. Frank Baum experienced a similar situation that could be a point of reference for this part of the musical number.
Evan I. Schwartz, author of Finding Oz: How L. Frank Baum Discovered the Great American Story, wrote:
"[L. Frank Baum] was often asked how it all came to be, how he discovered the Land of Oz. Like many authors of fiction, he was reluctant to say. (…) So, to appease newspaper reporters looking for an entertaining answer, Baum invented something whimsical but apocryphal."
Evan I. Schwartz continued, "[L. Frank Baum] held court in his Chicago home one day, telling a tale about a magical far-off place to his sons and their friends, when one little girl asked what this land was called. Frank didn't yet have a name for it; he simply glanced around the room, until his eyes stopped on a filing cabinet. 'The land is called… the land is called…' On the cabinet, underneath the drawers labeled A-G and H-N, sat one that said O-Z. 'The land,' said Frank, 'is called the Land of Oz.'"
It's fascinating to think of certain individuals like Glinda and Baum — who have been so mythologized — having their authority questioned and their narratives challenged by young kids who, really, were just asking a simple question that somehow didn't occur to anyone else before.