Why Dorothy Doesnât Wear Ruby Slippers in âWicked: For Goodâ
- - Why Dorothy Doesnât Wear Ruby Slippers in âWicked: For Goodâ
Sophie WangNovember 23, 2025 at 11:01 PM
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In the 1939 classic The Wizard of Oz, a young Judy Garland closed her eyes, clicked her heels three times, and repeated the now-famous line, âThereâs no place like home.â As Dorothy, the young farm girl from Kansas who gets swept up in a tornado and finds herself in Oz, Garland slipped her feet into the magical ruby red slippersâand 86 years later, the recognizable style still remains synonymous with the fantastical MGM musical tale.
(So much so that, in 2005, a pair was even stolen from a museum, and, just last December, they were named the most valuable item of film memorabilia in the world.)
Designed by MGMâs chief costume designer, Gilbert Adrian, the heeled slippers were constructed from a white silk base, dyed in red, covered in burgundy organza sequins, and finished with matching bow appliquĂ©sâtaking advantage of the new three-strip Technicolor film process that facilitated the rise of bright color movies in Hollywood.
However, in the original 1900 novel, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, author L. Frank Baum wrote the shoes to be silver. And with Wicked: For Good, Academy Award-winning costume designer Paul Tazewell brought Dorothyâs wardrobe back to its roots.
First teased in the initial installment of Jon M. Chuâs adaptation starring Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, the bejeweled silver shoes were introduced as a prized possession gifted to Elphabaâs sister, Nessarose Thropp, by their father following the death of their mother.
Referred to by Tazewell as the âjeweled shoes,â the silver spiral heels were crafted in collaboration with artisan Miodrag Guberinic, who 3D-printed the base before embellishing them by hand with over a thousand crystals. The result was a blend of history and modernity, referencing the original heels from the turn of the century, while creating an iconic work of art entirely unique to the Wicked universe. Plus, given copyright protections of Garlandâs ruby slippers, the Wicked team managed to avoid any legal issues.
âFor this, we werenât able to re-create the original film look that Judy Garland wore, and I wasnât particularly interested in that,â Tazewell told Harperâs Bazaar. âI used a silhouette of a little girlâs dress from the turn of the century, created in blue gingham, which is very specific to the Dorothy image that we know.â
âIf you look closely at Dorothy and the crystallized shoes, sheâs wearing blue socks. If you compare that to Judy Garlandâs Dorothy, she has blue socks with the ruby slippers. We threaded all of those ideas together so that it becomes nostalgic and a cohesive idea,â he continued.
Taking on a more central role in the second part, the shoes followed a similar storyline known to all fans of Oz, becoming magical, flying heels that, in the end, landed firmly on Dorothyâs feetâŠready to send her on her way.
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Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ