Wicked Wiki
Wicked Wiki
Tags: Visual edit apiedit
Tag: Visual edit
 
(262 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
  +
{{Infobox Character
"<nowiki>''</nowiki>'''''<nowiki>Someplace where there isn't any trouble. Do you suppose there is such a place Toto? There must be. It's not a place you can get to by a boat or a train. It's far far away. Behind the moon, beyond the rain...somewhere over the rainbow.''</nowiki>'''''"―The Wizard of Oz (1939)
 
 
|name= Dorothy Gale
  +
|image= 229ED0FA-7DA9-4C54-934D-2DEA7508034D.jpeg
  +
|gender= Female
  +
|hair= Brown
  +
|born= c. 1890
  +
Missouri
  +
|family= Henry (adopted “uncle”) <br> Em (adopted “aunt”) <br> Toto (dog)
  +
|relationships= [[Liir]] (small infatuation)
  +
|job= School Student
  +
|portrayer= Saara Aalto
  +
|first= ''[[Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West]]'' (1995)
  +
|bgcolor1= Green
  +
|bgcolor2= Grey|last = ''[[Out of Oz]]'' (2011)|also known as=Goddess of Gifts <br> The Visitor}}
  +
{{Quote|I would say to you: Would you ever forgive me for that accident, for the death of your sister; would you ever forgive me, for I could never forgive myself!|Dorothy to [[Elphaba Thropp]], [[Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West]]}}
   
  +
'''Dorothy Gale''' is a character from the ''Wicked Years'' novels and originally the adolescent protagonist/heroine from the ''Oz'' books by author [[L. Frank Baum]].
[[File:IMG_20140518_222227.jpg|thumb|200px|Dorothy Gale (1900 book)]]
 
   
  +
[[Gregory Maguire]], the author of the ''Wicked'' novels, portrays Dorothy not as the villain, but a mere outsider who is thrown into a realm she knows little to nothing about. With all the political drama and chaos surrounding her, this Dorothy is in way over her head, and she is painfully aware of the fact.
"<nowiki>''</nowiki>'''''<nowiki>It would take Dorothy Gale and her relatives three days to reach the mountains by train from Kansas, the conductor told them. No matter what the schoolteacher had said about Galileo, Copernicus and those other spoilsports, any cockamamie theory that the world was round remained refuted by the geometrical instrument of a rattling train applied to the spare facts of a prairie. Dorothy watched eagles and hawks careering too high to cast shadows, she watched the returning larks and bluebirds, and she wondered what they knew about the shape of the world and if they would ever tell her. "''</nowiki>'''''
 
[[Out of Oz]] (2011)
 
   
'''Dorothy Gale''' is a character invented by author [[L. Frank Baum]], based on his late niece, Dorothy Louise Gage. She is the main protaganist in Baum's Oz books as well as the classic 1939 MGM musical film, ''The Wizard of Oz,'' starring late actress Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale. The film is based on the original 1900 book, ''The Wonderful Wizard of Oz''. However, In the story of ''[[Wicked]]'', Dorothy is not the main character, she is the deuteragonist. [[Gregory Maguire]], the author of the ''Wicked'' books, portrays Dorothy as a good-natured child, practical, single-minded and even slightly boring. She also has a tendency to burst into song, which the Ozians find irritating to the point she is able to use it as a threat later in the book series. Dorothy is a mere outsider who is thrown into a realm she knows little to nothing about.
+
Dorothy is a good-natured child, practical and single-minded, but compared to the Ozians, she can seem slightly boring. She also has an annoying but slightly humorous tendency to burst into song, which the Ozians find irritating to the point she is able to use it as a threat later in the book series (specifically when she returns to Oz for the second time).
   
  +
==Physical Appearance==
In the 1900 book, Dorothy is a small girl with hair of braids and wearing Silver Shoes, in the 1939 film, Dorothy's a lot taller with pigtails and wears Ruby Slippers. In both versions, she wears a gingham dress while carrying a basket with her. Her appearence in ''Wicked'' stays more loyal to Judy Garland's iconic portrayal of Dorothy, using her appearence, personality traits, and mannerisms. Even though Dorothy plays an important role in this story, unlike the 1939 film, Dorothy's face is never seen, only her backside in the ''Wicked book'', and her silhouette in the ''Wicked'' musical.
 
[[File:5510616.jpg|thumb|100px|Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale (1939 film)]]
 
   
  +
In ''Wicked'', Dorothy is briefly described as being a ten-year-old little girl with her dark hair styled in two braided pigtails. She wears a checkered blue and white gingham pinafore dress with an apron.
==Background Information (1939 film)==
 
   
  +
In the fourth and final book of the series ''[[Out of Oz]]'', Maguire has Dorothy return to Oz six years later after her first unexpected arrival when she is approximately sixteen years old.
[[File:IMG_20140922_042953.jpg|thumb|150px|Dorothy Gale in Kansas 1900.]]
 
Dorothy Gale is an orphan who lived with her pet dog Toto, her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em on the Kansas praries. It is unknown how Dorothy's parents died, In the 2013 Disney prequel to the 1939 film, ''Oz the Great and Powerful'', Uncle Henry Gale is related to Dorothy's father, John Gale who married a woman named Annie. Disney's ''Oz'' reveals that Dorothy wears a gingham dress because her mother, Annie wore one too. However, this prequel ignores the events of ''Wicked''. One day, Dorothy got in trouble when Toto attacked Alimira Gulch, and she threatned to sue Dorothy and her family if they do not hand over Toto so she can put him down. Aunt Em told Dorothy to find herself a place where she will not get into any trouble and she decides to run away from home with Toto. A cyclone came and it's strong winds caused a window to hit Dorothy on the head, knocking her unconcious. The cyclone picked up the farmhouse along with Toto to the undiscovered and magical land of Oz, where it crushed and killed The Wicked Witch of the East and the Munchkins were free from her. Glinda, The Good Witch of the North gave Dorothy the Witch of the East's Ruby Slippers to protect her from the witch's vengeful sister, The Wicked Witch of the West and sended her to the Emerald City to see if the great and powerful Wizard of Oz can bring her home. Along the way, she meets a Scarecrow in need of brains, a Tin Man in need of a heart, and a Cowardly Lion in need of courage, so they tag along with her to get what they want from the Wizard. By the time they get there, The Wizard said he will give them what they need if they kill The Wicked Witch of the West and take her broom to him as proof she's dead. The gang makes it to the witch's castle in the haunted forest and there the wicked witch sets the Scarecrow on fire by using her broom and Dorothy saves him by throwing a bucket of water at him and accidently killing the witch, melting her completely. The gang returns with the broom and as promised, the Wizard got them what they wanted, only to find that the Wizard was not so great and powerful as he seemed, but when the time came for him to take Dorothy home, the hot air balloon they were supposed to use wandered off into the sky with the Wizard, leaving Dorothy behind. She sought out Glinda who told her she always had the power to go back to Kansas with the Ruby Slippers. But Dorothy would not believe her if Glinda told her in the first place, Dorothy had to learn it for herself. She learned that it was not enough for her to go see her aunt and uncle, but if she ever goes back to her heart's desire, she won't look any further then the backyard of her home because if it is not there, she really did not lose it to begin with. Dorothy clicked her heels three times and said ''"There's no place like home"''. She was taken back home to Kansas with Toto. Dorothy was brought to Oz to be taught a lesson to never run away from home. She tells her uncle and aunt that The Land of Oz is a real place, but they dismissed it as a dream since Dorothy was knocked out.
 
   
  +
==Novels==
==The Matter of Dorothy==
 
   
  +
===''[[Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West|Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West]]''===
'''''So much happened in Oz before Dorothy dropped in...'''''
 
   
  +
In the year 1900, Dorothy Gale is a ten year old orphan who lives on a Kansas farm with her Uncle Henry, her Aunt Em and her pet dog, Toto. One day both Dorothy and Toto find themselves in [[Oz]] after a deadly cyclone picks up their farmhouse with the two of them aloft. The cyclone transported the house to the realm where Oz is and when the storm finally released the house it fell out of the sky and crash-landed in the hamlet of Center Munch, located in the heart of [[Munchkinland]]. It also landed on [[Nessarose Thropp]], The Wicked Witch of the East, crushing and killing her instantly in the process.
[[File:Oz_Cyclone.jpg|thumb|150px|Dorothy's house in the cyclone 1900.]]
 
   
  +
Dorothy soon meets the Munchkins and [[Glinda Arduenna Upland|Glinda]] the Good, who thinks it best to get Dorothy out of Munchkinland due to all the political drama Nessarose's death will cause. Glinda also gives Dorothy the Wicked Witch's silver shoes, her most prized possession. She also casts a protection spell upon them to keep her safe. Afterwards, Glinda sends the girl and her dog to the [[The Emerald City|Emerald City]] to see the [[Wizard]], in hopes that he could possibly help them. Along the way, and while on the yellow brick road, Dorothy spends the night at the house of a Munchkin named [[Boq]]. After her stay she continues her journey across Oz and soon meets a brainless [[Scarecrow]], a heartless Tin Man named [[Nick Chopper]] and [[Brrr]], a cowardly Lion. The three join Dorothy and Toto on their journey to see the Wizard. Upon finally meeting the Wizard, he tells Dorothy in exchange to be sent back home, she and her friends must prove themselves worthy of his assistants and go to the [[The Vinkus|Vinkus]] where she must kill [[Elphaba Thropp]], The Wicked Witch of the West. She must also bring back the witch's magic spell book called the [[Grimmerie]] as "proof".
<nowiki>''</nowiki>'''''<nowiki>...she was up and running in an ungainly way, and her three goofy companions followed in a mounting panic. As the first few drops of rain fell, the Witch caught sight, not of the girl's face, but the shoes. Her sister's shoes! They sparkled, even in the darkening afternoon. They sparkled like yellow diamonds in the sun, embers of blood, and thorny stars...''</nowiki>''''' -introduction to Wicked (1995)
 
   
  +
Elsewhere, hidden away in her castle at [[Kiamo Ko]], Elphaba finds out about her sister's death and learns from Glinda that Dorothy now wears her sister's magic shoes and is furious because the pair were supposed to go to her and not to Dorothy. Several weeks later, and after many failed attempts to retrieve the shoes, Elphaba discovers Dorothy is on her way to see her and is accompanied by her three companions. Elphaba then immediately sends out her animals to try to lead Dorothy to her Kiamo Ko castle. However, Elphaba's attempt backfires and all her pets are killed except the flying monkeys who bring Dorothy to the castle along with the Lion. The Scarecrow and Tin Man are left behind outside.
Author [[Gregory Maguire]] used the 1939 version of Dorothy portrayed by Judy Garland, using her appearence, personality traits, and mannerisms while adding his own traits into the character making it work for the story of ''[[Wicked]]''. Maguire portrays Dorothy in ''Wicked'' as a good-natured child, practical, single-minded and even slightly boring. Much like in the original story by Baum, ''Wicked'' reveals that Dorothy's experience in Oz was real and not a dream like it appeared to be in the 1939 film. In both novels, Oz is just an undiscovered country-- a far off land that is cut off from the rest of the world and surrounded by a great vast desert much too deadly to cross. Oz lies in a less civilized universe, so to speak, where great and marvelous things are possible and real magic still exist. The [[Emerald City]] is much darker and dangerous, compared to the 1900 book and 1939 film. It maybe a beautiful place populated by wealthy people who wear lavish clothes, however, the city's streets are filled with crime and poverty, by prostitutes, drug-dealers/addicts, thugs and thieves.
 
   
 
To get things straightened out, Elphaba finally confronts Dorothy. While assuming Dorothy had to be tied into the tapestry of conspiracies in Oz, Elphaba demands the shoes Dorothy has been wearing since her unexpected arrival. Dorothy tries to do what Elphaba commands but the shoes are enchanted under the protection of Glinda and will not come off. Dorothy confesses that the Wizard even tried to pry the shoes off before sending her off to Kiamo Ko in exchange to be sent home. But despite her efforts, the slippers simply will not come off her feet. Elphaba sees that Dorothy is magically locked tight inside of them. Dorothy tearfully admits to Elphaba that the wizard did indeed send her to kill Elphaba. But Dorothy just wanted to find an alternative way to go home as she believes Elphaba is a witch and witches have magical powers. Dorothy wanted to give Elphaba the shoes if she would help her. Dorothy was so desperate to go home and would do anything to leave, even if it meant going to Elphaba who could have killed her.
Despite being the main protagonist in the original story, Dorothy Gale is only referenced to a few times in ''Wicked'', appearing as a silhouette in the musical and a semi-cameo character toward the end of the book revealing only her backside. In the story of ''Wicked'', Dorothy is not the focal point of the plot even though she does play a rather small but very important role, only being involved in the chaos and drama towards the end of Maguire's tale. Dorothy is seen as a mere outsider who cannot read Oz's unique writing system, knows nothing about Oz's complex politics and overall system, laws or history.
 
 
[[File:Elphaba_melts.jpg|thumb|327x327px|Dorothy Gale confronts The Wicked Witch of the West, Elphaba Thropp in ''Wicked''.]]
  +
Elphaba is physiologically and emotionally crippled by Dorothy's honest pleas for forgiveness for killing her sister. Elphaba then becomes furious since she never received any absolution for her sins. As it became apparent, Elphaba briefly realizes that Dorothy really was an innocent human girl from another world just trying to find her way home again. Elphaba waves her burning broom in the air and, not paying attention to her surroundings, the hot sparks caught on her black dress and cape, setting her ablaze. Dorothy tries to save Elphaba and put out the fire by tossing a bucket of water at her, but to her horror, the water melts the Witch away, instantly killing her by accident instead of saving her. After the Wicked Witch is dead, Dorothy took a green bottle called "[[Green Elixir|Miracle Elixir]]" with her to prove to the Wizard she was at Kiamo Ko. She did not take the Grimmerie because it was simply too heavy to carry.
   
  +
Afterwards Dorothy is hailed as a messiah of some sort and mass celebration is thrown throughout all of Oz, mostly amoung the loyal Ozians. When the Wizard fails to keep his promise to Dorothy, she goes to Glinda for help and learns she had the power to go back to Kansas through the magic of the shoes.
Dorothy is oblivious to the world around her and although Dorothy is well-meaning, mature for her age and very compassionate beyond her years, her innocence and unyielding desire to return back to her homeland Kansas, causes a domino effect in the result of negative outcomes. And much unwanted trouble and heartache for the main character of the book, [[Elphaba Thropp]], The Wicked Witch of the West.
 
   
 
It is rumored by the Ozians that when Dorothy was sent home, she was seen descending up into the sky in the direction of her homeland, waving her apron giddily and carrying that "damn fool dog". Other conspiracy theorists believe Dorothy never left Oz at all.
It is Elphaba's bad reputation as Dorothy does not know any better to think of Elphaba for anything other than what everyone else in Oz views her as, the ''Wicked Witch of the West''. Even though Elphaba is not actually so, just misunderstood. But Dorothy however, is not aware of this until she meets Elphaba in the Vinkus aka the "Winkie Country" at the Kiamo Ko castle when the [[Wizard]] sends Dorothy to kill her. In the 1939 film, the Wicked Witch of the West is a counterpart of a woman that owns half the county of Kansas named Almira Gulch, an evil heartless woman who Dorothy calls a "Wicked old Witch" because she wanted to take Toto from Dorothy and put him down. The Wicked Witch of the West is a manifestation of Dorothy's hatred towards Miss Gulch. However, in ''Wicked,'' it appears that Almira Gulch does not exist, considering that Elphaba is not truely evil like her movie counterpart, or Miss Gulch, just misunderstood.
 
   
'''Goddess of Gifts...'''
+
===''[[Son of a Witch]]''===
   
 
The story picks up right after Elphaba's tragic death. [[Liir]], her oddball son, accompanies Dorothy, her dog Toto, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion back to the [[Emerald City]] to see the Wizard again after successfully completing their task. On the way, Liir forms a small crush on Dorothy, becoming secretly infatuated with her.
<nowiki>''</nowiki>'''''<nowiki>...When Boq saw the girl's silver shoes he said, "You must be a great Sorceress of some kind." "Why?" Asked Dorothy. "Because you wear the magic silver shoes and have killed the pair's owner, the Wicked Witch of the East. Besides, you have white in your frock, and only Witches and Sorceresses wear white." "My dress is blue and white checked," said Dorothy, smoothing out the wrinkles in it. "It is kind of you to wear that," said Boq. "Blue is the color of the Munchkins, and white is the good Witch color. So we know you are a friendly one.''</nowiki>''''' -The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900)
 
   
 
While traveling through the Vinkus, Dorothy and the group all meet a shapeshifting Princess who is also the head leader of her native tribe, the Scrow. The Princesses name is [[Nastoya]] who appeared to the group as a human girl but was originally an Elephant at birth. Nastoya explains to them all that because of the Wizard and his prejudice veiws against Animals, she disguised herself and vailed her true form as a clever shield of protection. Yet Nastoya confesses she is finding it increasingly difficult to switch forms which leads her to believe she is dying.
[[File:IMG_20140922_070007.jpg|thumb|150px|''"You must be a great Sorceress!''" 1900]]
 
In both Baum's 1900 book and Maguire's 1995 mature revision, Dorothy attends a banquet party in Oz and spends her first night on the yellow brick road at the house of a wealthy Munchkin farmer named [[Boq]] who is the richest Munchkin in Oz. Boq held this celebration in honor of Dorothy for killing the Wicked Witch of the East and setting the Munchkinlanders free from her bondage.
 
   
 
As so, Nastoya shockingly morphs herself and transforms right infront of Dorothy and her companions which is described to be revolting to watch as Nastoya's skin stretches and her bones shift and body mutates. Seeing this, Dorothy nearly vomits in her apron and Toto passes out.
In ''Wicked,'' it is revealed that the two characters discussed the etymology of Dorothy's name. Boq finds it interesting that Dorothy's name is the reverse of her land's "King" Theodore — which means "Gift of the Gods" — and that Dorothy means "Goddess of Gifts". This fact causes many of the superstitious Ozians to look at Dorothy as a saint in the flesh. And much like a disciple sent to Oz to fulfill a prophecy by the "Unnamed God". Given the fact Dorothy wears Nessarose, The Wicked Witch of the East's magic shoes, make the Ozians even more superstitious of her. And along with the coincidence her last name is the same name of the Wizard's Army aka the ''"Gale Force''", makes Dorothy nearly untouchable. Her disposition was so incredible to the Ozians that they imagined at one point that she must be an assassin, disguised as a "''Gullible Sweetheart.''" 
 
   
  +
When Dorothy reaches the Emerald City, Liir is told to wait outside the Wizard's palace while Dorothy and her friends step inside to speak with Oz. She could not get the Wizard the Grimmerie because it was too heavy to take with her but she gave him the green bottle he found familiar. Not only did Dorothy and her fellow comrades learn that the Wizard was not so great and powerful because he's a mere humbug human, and that he was the real antagonist who used deceit and trickery to get his way, but he was also the illegitimate father of Elphaba. Dorothy was going to leave Oz with the Wizard in a hot air balloon, but he already left, because everyone learned the truth about him, his empire started to collapse and he seemingly left Oz back to America.
==Magic Slippers==
 
   
  +
Glinda then steps in and sends Dorothy home through the magic of the shoes.
In Gregory Maguire's ''Wicked'', the shoes are not Ruby Slippers. Nor are they made of silver like in Baum's book. The shoes are not called by any specific color or gem. They are created and designed in such a unique and authentic way, that nothing has ever been done nor seen before them. The shoes are the very first of its kind. So instead they are described like this:
 
   
  +
Despite Dorothy's promise to come back to say goodbye to Liir before returning to Kansas, Dorothy leaves without a proper farewell, leaving Liir heartbroken. Despite this, Liir ultimately does not hold it against Dorothy because he understands how eager she was to get back home again.
''"From a pile of ash shavings she withdrew a shoe, and then another. Were they silver? – or blue? – or now red? – lacquered with a candy shell brilliance of polish? It was hard to tell and it didn't matter; the effect was dazzling." (2.3.4.20)''
 
   
 
===''[[A Lion Among Men]]''===
The character, Turtle Heart probably describes their symbolism best:
 
   
 
Dorothy makes a brief appearance when Brrr, the Cowardly Lion first encounters her after he abandons city life to live in the wilderness of Oz. He meets the girl on the yellow brick road when she is already accompanied by the Scarecrow and Nick Chopper, the Tin Man. Brrr then travels With Dorothy to Emerald City and to Kiamo Ko when the Wizard demands the group to kill Elphaba.
''"To look in glass," said Turtle Heart, pointing to the roundel he had made as a toy for Elphaba, "is to see the future, in blood and rubies." (1.8.46)''
 
   
  +
It is also revealed in this novel, that Uncle Henry and Aunt Em are not blood related to Dorothy. They actually wrote an orphanage in Missouri asking for an orphan to help on the Kansas farm.
The shoes are the one thing the Witch wants above all else so her power will be the greatest in Oz in the 1939 film. But Elphaba wants the shoes for slightly different reasons than her movie counterpart. While in the 1939 film, the shoes were symbols of power and protection. In Maguire's reinvisonment the shoes are symbols of what Elphaba has secretly craved all her life; love, respect, acceptance, and family. Above all else, Nessa's shoes represent Elphaba's need to be accepted and considered important, particularly to her father. The shoes aren't just related to themes of family and acceptance, though. They also, as in the 1939 film, represent beauty and authority. Interestingly, though, that becomes more of an excuse for Elphaba to justify her obsession with getting the shoes from Dorothy:
 
   
 
===''[[Out of Oz]]''===
''"Should she pursue Dorothy, should she snatch those shoes away – and what were her real motives? Was it to keep them out of the hands of the Wizard ... Or was it to snatch back some small shred of Frex's attention?" (5.10.1)''
 
   
 
It is explained that Dorothy was teleported home, flying over the land of Oz and back to Kansas thanks to the power of the silver shoes. Unfortunately, Dorothy lost the pair as they fell off of her feet on the flight back and were gone forever. Nevertheless, Dorothy reappeared on the horizon, shoeless but still in one piece on the prairie and of course, holding Toto in her arms.
Ultimately, other than considered dazzling and beautiful to look at, the slippers really don't have all that much power at all really. Elphaba is the one who turns the shoes into something more than they actually are.
 
   
 
Due to her extended disappearance and unexplainable survival from the cyclone, the other children at the Kansas Schoolhouse shunned Dorothy and labeled her a freak of nature for riding the winds of a twister and living to tell about it. Nonetheless suddenly reappearing out of nowhere months later. And Dorothy's tales of Oz, only make her seem completely crazy. Thus, making her un-marrigeable and "ungodly".
*(Gregory Maguire combines elements from the 1939 film and the 1900 book by Baum by making the slippers both ruby and silver while adding his own twist to his own version of the classic Oz tale.)
 
   
 
Six years later, Dorothy and Toto are unexpectedly sent to Oz by fate once again. But now she is approximately sixteen years old. Even though it has been less than a decade since Dorothy's first visit to Oz, it has been around twenty years in Oz's time.
==Dorothy Gale In The Wicked Years==
 
   
 
Back in Kansas, Dorothy's relatives never believed her stories about Oz and criticised her for having her head in the clouds and sabotaging her future. To help Dorothy forget about Oz, Em and Henry decide to take a trip to San Fransisco on vacation. However, after sight seeing, Dorothy ends up being trapped with Toto in a motel elevator when a earthquake hits California. (Believed to be the same California earthquake from 1906).
'''In the Novels...'''
 
   
 
When the building collapses, the elevator that Dorothy is in falls into the bowels of the earth and into another dimension. The elevator falls from the sky and accidentally landed on a cow and kills it. And Toto was somehow lost in the process when the small dog fell out of the elevator doors which were cracked just enough for Toto to slip through.
<nowiki>"''</nowiki>'''''[[Grimmerie]]? I don't know what your talking about. I am all alone in this strange land, don't make me do this!" Cried the girl. "I would give you the shoes, if I could. But they won't come off! I think [[Glinda]]<nowiki> put a spell on them, I've been trying to get them off for days and days. My socks are so sweaty it's not to be believed! ''</nowiki>'''''" -Wicked (1995)
 
 
'''''Wicked...'''''
 
 
Dorothy Gale and her dog Toto from Kansas end up in Oz when a cyclone picks up their farmhouse with both of them aloft. The cyclone transported the house to the magical land of Oz where it fell out of the sky and landed on [[Nessarose]], The Wicked Witch of the East killing her.
 
 
Dorothy soon met the Munchkins and [[Glinda]] who thought it would be best to get Dorothy out of Munchkinland before the girl gets blamed and possibly killed by the Munchkins due to all the drama Nessarose's death has caused. Glinda also gives Dorothy Nessarose's slippers and cast a protection spell on them to keep the lost child safe. Afterwards, Glinda sent the girl and her dog to see the [[Wizard]] who lived in [[Emerald City]] in hopes that he could possibly help them. Along the way, Dorothy met a brainless Scarecrow, a heartless Tin Woodman named Nick Chopper and [[Brrr]], a Cowardly Lion. The three joined Dorothy and Toto to see the Wizard. After having many adventures and finally meeting the Wizard, he tells Dorothy to go to the Vinkus aka the Winkie country to the Kiamo Ko castle and kill ''"The Wicked Witch of the West ''" and bring back her magic book called the [[Grimmerie]]. Meanwhile, Elphaba learned from Glinda about her sister's death and that Dorothy now wears her sister's slippers and is furious because the pair were suppose to go to her and not to Dorothy. Several weeks later, Elphaba finally learns Dorothy is on her way to see her and is accompanied by three companions. So Elphaba then has her flying monkeys bring Dorothy, Toto, and the Lion to her.
 
 
In an attempt to get things straightened out, Elphaba finally confronts Dorothy. While assuming Dorothy had to be tied into the tapestry of conspiracies in Oz, Elphaba demands the slippers Dorothy has been wearing since her unexpected arrival. Dorothy tries to do what Elphaba commands but the shoes are enchanted under the protection of [[Glinda]] and will not come off. Dorothy confesses that the [[Wizard of Oz]] even tried to pry the shoes off before sending Dorothy to kill Elphaba in exchange to be sent home. But despite efforts, the slippers simply will not come off her feet. Dorothy is magically locked tight inside of them. Dorothy then confesses to Elphaba that the Wizard sent her to kill Elphaba, but Dorothy, being a mere child cannot bring herself to do such a terrible task. Glinda actually did Dorothy a favor. The shoes were like a double edge sword, being both a blessing and a curse to Dorothy.. If it wasn't for the shoes and the protection she gave her, Dorothy would have been dead in Oz within a week. In the 1900 book, she encounters many near death experiences while on her way to the Emerald City, such as being chased by the wild Kalidah beasts who we're flesh eaters. Dorothy didn't want to kill Elphaba. She just wanted to find an alternative way to go home as she believes Elphaba was a witch and witches have magical powers. Dorothy wanted to give Elphaba the shoes in exchange to go home. But the slippers were stuck to her feet. It hints in ''Wicked'' that there was a part of Dorothy that hated Oz. Dorothy was desperate to home and would do anything to leave, even if it meant going to Elphaba who could have killed her.
 
[[File:Elphaba_melts.jpg|thumb|200px|Dorothy confronts The Wicked Witch, Elphaba.]]
 
As it became apparent, Elphaba breifly realizes that Dorothy really was an innocent human girl from a different place who had been thrown into a world that she knew nothing about. Elphaba is physiologically and emotionally crippled by Dorothy's honest pleas for forgiveness for killing her sister. It is then when Elphaba sets herself on fire due to not paying attention to her surroundings. The hot sparks caught on her black dress and cape, setting her ablaze. Dorothy tried to save Elphaba and put out the fire by grabbing a nearby bucket of water that was collecting rainwater from a leak. Dorothy tossed the bucket at her, but to Dorothy's horror it tragically melted the Witch away, killing her by accident instead of helping her.
 
 
'''''Son Of A Witch...'''''
 
 
In the sequel ''Son of a Witch'', the story picks up right after Elphaba's tragic death. [[Liir]] her oddball son, accompanies Dorothy, her dog Toto, the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman and the Cowardly Lion back to the [[Emerald City]] to see the Wizard again after successfully completing their task.
 
 
While traveling through the Vinkus, Dorothy and the group all meet a shapeshifting Princess who is also the head leader of her native tribe. The Princesses name is Nastoya who appeared to the group as a human girl but was originally an Elephant at birth. Nastoya explains to them all that because of the [[Wizard]] and his prejudice veiws against Animals, she disguised herself and vailed her true form as a clever shield of protection. Yet Nastoya confesses she is finding it increasingly difficult to switch forms which leads her to believe she is dying.
 
 
As so, Nastoya shockingly morphs herself and transforms right infront of Dorothy and her companions which is described to be revolting to watch as Nastoya's skin stretches and her bones shift and body mutates. Seeing this, Dorothy nearly vomits in her apron and Toto passes out. In the fourth and final book of the ''Wicked'' series ''Out of Oz'', it is revealed that an old Witch called Mombi was the sorceress who placed the spell on her.
 
 
When Dorothy reaches the [[Emerald City]], Liir is told to wait outside the Wizard's palace while Dorothy and her friends step inside to speak with Oz. Dorothy and the gang learn that the Wizard was not immortal, and she gave him a green bottle he found familiar but could not get the Grimmerie book because it was too heavy to pick up. Dorothy was going to leave Oz with the Wizard in a hot air balloon, but he already left, leaving her behind. Afterwards she went to Glinda for help and she told her she always had the power to go back to Kansas with the magic slippers by clicking her heels three times. Despite her promise to come back to say goodbye before returning to Kansas, Dorothy forgets about Liir and leaves without a proper farewell, leaving Liir heartbroken. Despite this, Liir does not hold it against Dorothy because he understands how eager she was to get back home.
 
 
It is rumored by the Ozians that when Dorothy was sent home, she was seen descending up into the sky waving her apron and carrying that "damn fool dog".
 
 
'''''A Lion Among Men...'''''
 
 
In the third book of the ''Wicked'' series, ''A Lion Among Men'', Brrr, the Cowardly Lion meets Dorothy when he abandons city life to live in the wilderness of Oz. He meets the girl on the yellow brick road when she is already accompanied by the Scarecrow and Nick Chopper, the Tin Woodman. Brrr then goes With Dorothy to Emerald City and to Kiamo Ko to kill Elphaba.
 
 
'''''Out Of Oz...'''''
 
 
In the fourth and final book of the ''Wicked'' series, ''Out of Oz'', it is explained that Dorothy was teleported home, flying over the land of Oz and back to Kansas thanks to the power of the slippers. Unfortunately, Dorothy lost the pair as they fell off of her feet on the flight back and were gone forever. Nevertheless, Dorothy reappeared on the horizon, shoeless but still in one piece on the prairie and of course, holding Toto.
 
 
Due to her extended disappearance and unexplainable survival from the cyclone, the other children at the Kansas Schoolhouse shunned Dorothy and labeled her a freak of nature for riding the winds of a twister and living to tell about it. Nonetheless suddenly reappearing out of nowhere months later. And Dorothy's tales of Oz, only make her seem completely crazy. Thus, making her unmarrigeable and "ungodly".
 
 
Six years later, Dorothy and Toto are unexpectedly sent to Oz by fate once again. But now she is approximately sixteen years old. Even though it has been less than a decade since Dorothy's first visit to Oz, it has been around twenty to thirty years in Oz's time.
 
 
Back in Kansas, Dorothy's relitives never believed her stories about Oz and criticised her for having her head in the clouds and sabotaging her future. To help Dorothy forget about Oz, Em and Henry decide to take a trip to San Fransisco on vacation. However, after sight seeing, Dorothy ends up being trapped with Toto in a motel elevator when a earthquake hits California. (Believed to be the same California earthquake from 1906).
 
 
When the building collapses, the elevator that Dorothy is in falls into the bowels of the earth and into another dimension. The elevator falls from the sky and accidentally landed on a cow and killed it. And Toto was somehow lost in the process when the small dog fell out of the elevator doors which were cracked just enough for Toto to slip through.
 
   
 
Dorothy was buried alive under all the rocks and pieces of the earth that the earthquake brought down along with the elevator. Luckily, the elevator was found by nearby locals who dug Dorothy up and saved her. Dorothy suffered from a temporary state of amnesia and a bump on her head which gave her a near concussion. She is taken in by strangers and nursed back to health. Dorothy spends many months recuperating from the traumatic event and slowly gains her memory back.
 
Dorothy was buried alive under all the rocks and pieces of the earth that the earthquake brought down along with the elevator. Luckily, the elevator was found by nearby locals who dug Dorothy up and saved her. Dorothy suffered from a temporary state of amnesia and a bump on her head which gave her a near concussion. She is taken in by strangers and nursed back to health. Dorothy spends many months recuperating from the traumatic event and slowly gains her memory back.
   
When Dorothy's health strengthens, she realizes she is back in Oz again, specifically in the country of Oz's Glikkus tribe. Dorothy learns that Oz has fallen into war and the Glikkun trolls extradited her to Munchkinland's new capital, Bright Lennins, where the new Eminence had her stand trial for the murders of saint [[Nessarose]] and saint [[Elphaba]] Thropp, calling it "regicide." Dorothy is imprisoned against her will and is used as a mere scapegoat who was left accountable for the deaths of the two Thropp sisters who died decades prior. And sure enough, the overall court case finds Dorothy guilty and she is sentenced. But to Dorothy's surprise her old friend Brrr, aka the [[Cowardly Lion]] came to her aid. The Lion was also accompanied by Mr. Boss, and Little Daffy who helped rescue Dorothy from her harsh sentence. The group then immediately high tail it out of Munchkinland before "things get ugly". Eventually Brrr is made the governor of Oz until the long lost Princess [[Ozma]] of Oz comes of age to take the throne.
+
When Dorothy's health strengthens, she realizes she is back in Oz again, specifically in the country of Oz's Glikkus tribe. Dorothy learns that Oz has fallen into war and the Glikkun trolls extradited her to Munchkinland's new capital, [[Bright Lettins]], where the new Eminence has her stand trial for the murders of Saint Nessarose and Saint Elphaba Thropp, calling it "regicide." Dorothy is imprisoned against her will and is used as a mere scapegoat who was left accountable for the deaths of the two Thropp sisters who died decades prior. And sure enough, the overall court case finds Dorothy guilty and she is sentenced. But to Dorothy's surprise her old friend Brrr, the Cowardly Lion, came to her aid. The Lion was also accompanied by [[Mr. Boss]], and [[Daffodil Scully|Little Daffy]] who helped rescue Dorothy from her harsh sentence. The group then immediately high tail it out of Munchkinland before "things get ugly". Eventually Brrr is made the Throne Minister of Oz until the long lost Princess [[Ozma]] of Oz comes of age to take the throne.
   
Dorothy is finally reunited with her dog Toto whom she thought was dead and the [[Grimmerie]] book was used to send Dorothy and Toto back to California where she was reunited with her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.
+
Dorothy is finally reunited with her dog Toto whom she thought was dead and the Grimmerie was used to send Dorothy and Toto back to California where she is presumably reunited with her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.
   
 
==In the Musical==
 
==In the Musical==
   
  +
Even though Dorothy plays an important role in this story, her face is never seen, only her backside in the book illustrations, and her silhouette in the musical.
[[Madame Morrible]], the headmistress of Shiz University is the antagonist in ''Wicked''. She has control over the weather and killed Nessarose, The Wicked Witch of the East by bringing a cyclone from Kansas which brought it's resident Dorothy Gale. Glinda gives Dorothy Nessarose's Ruby slippers which were originally magic shoes of many colors in Maguire's Book. The Shoes that were a gift to Nessarose were Silver Shoes, but the shoes were turned to Ruby's thanks to the magic it now has and Nessarose who was handicaped could walk. While Dorothy is present in the popular Broadway musical ''Wicked'', she is never actually seen; when the main characters interact with her, they speak into direction of the wings, or into a trapdoor, as if she is sitting offstage and out of the view of the audience.
 
  +
[[File:Dorot.jpg|thumb|left|100px|Dorothy Melting Elphaba in the Musical.]]
 
  +
[[File:Dorothy Gale.png|thumb|333x333px]]
Dorothy does appear on the stage during a pivotal scene, but the audience sees only her silhouette.The image of the melting is potrayed by a projector onto a sheet that is drawn across the stage by Elphaba to protect Glinda.
 
 
[[Madame Morrible/Musical|Madame Morrible]], the headmistress of [[Shiz University]] and the antagonist (along with [[Wizard/Musical|The Wizard]]) in the musical version of ''Wicked ''has control over the weather and killed [[Nessarose/Musical|Nessarose]], The Wicked Witch of the East by bringing a cyclone from Kansas which brought it's resident Dorothy Gale. [[Glinda Upland/Musical|Glinda]] gives Dorothy Nessarose's Ruby slippers. She would befriend [[Cowardly Lion/Musical|the Cowardly Lion]], [[Fiyero Tiggular/Musical|the Scarecrow]] and [[Boq/Musical|the Tin Man]] while being sent by the Wizard to kill the [[Elphaba/Musical|Wicked Witch of the West]]. She throws water at her which she believes melts her. Dorothy is present in the popular Broadway musical ''Wicked'', but she is never actually seen; when the main characters interact with her, they speak into direction of the wings, or into a trapdoor, as if she is sitting offstage and out of the view of the audience.
 
[[File:Dorot.jpg|thumb|right|266x266px|Dorothy melting Elphaba in the musical.]]
 
Dorothy does appear on the stage during a pivotal scene, but the audience sees only her silhouette. The shadows of the performers being back lit onto a scrim that is drawn across the stage by Elphaba to protect Glinda. Contrary to popular belief, the melting is performed in real time every performance, and Dorothy is played - in full costume, by the Glinda understudy.
   
However, in the Helsinki City Theatre Production (2010-2011) Dorothy appears several times throughout the musical in key scenes, such as in the Cornfields skipping happily along a road paved with yellow bricks and finally in the Melting scene throwing water at Elphaba. She's portrayed by Saara Aalto.
+
However, in n the Helsinki City Theatre production (and subsequent non replicate productions thereafter), Dorothy appears several times throughout the musical in key scenes, such as in the Cornfields skipping happily along the yellow brick road and finally in the Melting scene throwing water at Elphaba. She was originally portrayed by Saara Aalto.
   
  +
==Trivia==
==The Real Dorothy Gale==
 
  +
* Dorothy Gale originally wore silver shoes with pointed toes in L. Frank Baum's 1900 novel ''The Wonderful Wizard of Oz'', not Ruby Slippers like in the 1939 MGM musical film version.
: <span style="line-height: 115%; font-family: "Calibri","sans-serif"; font-size: 11pt; mso-ascii-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-fareast-font-family: Calibri; mso-fareast-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-hansi-theme-font: minor-latin; mso-bidi-font-family: "Times New Roman"; mso-bidi-theme-font: minor-bidi; mso-ansi-language: EN-US; mso-fareast-language: EN-US; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA;">[[File:2596767906_d049109c98_z.jpg|thumb|left]]On June 11, 1898, in Bloomington, Illinois, Dorothy Louise Gage, was born to Sophie Jewel and Thomas Clarkson Gage, the brother-in-law of L. Frank Baum. Frank’s wife was intensely fond of the child and treated her as the daughter she never had, but always wanted. Five months later, Dorothy Louise died of a "congestion of the brain” on November 11, 1898. Frank’s wife was stricken with grief, she wrote to her sister- in-law: ''"Dorothy was a beautiful baby. I could have taken her for my very own and loved her devotedly."'' Frank loving his wife so dearly, not only named, but changed the main character of his latest children’s book from a boy to a girl named Dorothy, after his little niece.
 
  +
* In the 1900 book, the character of Dorothy is no older than 10 years old, yet Judy Garland was 16 when she portrayed Dorothy in the 1939 film. In the film, Dorothy is supposed to be 12 years old.
  +
* Dorothy does not sing in the ''Oz'' books.
  +
* In the Oz books, the fate of Dorothy's parents is never revealed. In ''Wicked'', it is said Dorothy's parents died in a boating accident and she was then adopted by Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.
 
[[Category:Characters of Wicked]]
 
[[Category:Characters of Wicked]]
 
[[Category:Earthlings]]
 
[[Category:Earthlings]]
 
[[Category:The Wizard of OZ Characters]]
 
[[Category:The Wizard of OZ Characters]]
 
[[Category:The Wicked Years]]

Latest revision as of 13:22, 27 March 2024

I would say to you: Would you ever forgive me for that accident, for the death of your sister; would you ever forgive me, for I could never forgive myself!
— Dorothy to Elphaba Thropp, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

Dorothy Gale is a character from the Wicked Years novels and originally the adolescent protagonist/heroine from the Oz books by author L. Frank Baum.

Gregory Maguire, the author of the Wicked novels, portrays Dorothy not as the villain, but a mere outsider who is thrown into a realm she knows little to nothing about. With all the political drama and chaos surrounding her, this Dorothy is in way over her head, and she is painfully aware of the fact.

Dorothy is a good-natured child, practical and single-minded, but compared to the Ozians, she can seem slightly boring. She also has an annoying but slightly humorous tendency to burst into song, which the Ozians find irritating to the point she is able to use it as a threat later in the book series (specifically when she returns to Oz for the second time).

Physical Appearance

In Wicked, Dorothy is briefly described as being a ten-year-old little girl with her dark hair styled in two braided pigtails. She wears a checkered blue and white gingham pinafore dress with an apron.

In the fourth and final book of the series Out of Oz, Maguire has Dorothy return to Oz six years later after her first unexpected arrival when she is approximately sixteen years old.

Novels

Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West

In the year 1900, Dorothy Gale is a ten year old orphan who lives on a Kansas farm with her Uncle Henry, her Aunt Em and her pet dog, Toto. One day both Dorothy and Toto find themselves in Oz after a deadly cyclone picks up their farmhouse with the two of them aloft. The cyclone transported the house to the realm where Oz is and when the storm finally released the house it fell out of the sky and crash-landed in the hamlet of Center Munch, located in the heart of Munchkinland. It also landed on Nessarose Thropp, The Wicked Witch of the East, crushing and killing her instantly in the process.

Dorothy soon meets the Munchkins and Glinda the Good, who thinks it best to get Dorothy out of Munchkinland due to all the political drama Nessarose's death will cause. Glinda also gives Dorothy the Wicked Witch's silver shoes, her most prized possession. She also casts a protection spell upon them to keep her safe. Afterwards, Glinda sends the girl and her dog to the Emerald City to see the Wizard, in hopes that he could possibly help them. Along the way, and while on the yellow brick road, Dorothy spends the night at the house of a Munchkin named Boq. After her stay she continues her journey across Oz and soon meets a brainless Scarecrow, a heartless Tin Man named Nick Chopper and Brrr, a cowardly Lion. The three join Dorothy and Toto on their journey to see the Wizard. Upon finally meeting the Wizard, he tells Dorothy in exchange to be sent back home, she and her friends must prove themselves worthy of his assistants and go to the Vinkus where she must kill Elphaba Thropp, The Wicked Witch of the West. She must also bring back the witch's magic spell book called the Grimmerie as "proof".

Elsewhere, hidden away in her castle at Kiamo Ko, Elphaba finds out about her sister's death and learns from Glinda that Dorothy now wears her sister's magic shoes and is furious because the pair were supposed to go to her and not to Dorothy. Several weeks later, and after many failed attempts to retrieve the shoes, Elphaba discovers Dorothy is on her way to see her and is accompanied by her three companions. Elphaba then immediately sends out her animals to try to lead Dorothy to her Kiamo Ko castle. However, Elphaba's attempt backfires and all her pets are killed except the flying monkeys who bring Dorothy to the castle along with the Lion. The Scarecrow and Tin Man are left behind outside.

To get things straightened out, Elphaba finally confronts Dorothy. While assuming Dorothy had to be tied into the tapestry of conspiracies in Oz, Elphaba demands the shoes Dorothy has been wearing since her unexpected arrival. Dorothy tries to do what Elphaba commands but the shoes are enchanted under the protection of Glinda and will not come off. Dorothy confesses that the Wizard even tried to pry the shoes off before sending her off to Kiamo Ko in exchange to be sent home. But despite her efforts, the slippers simply will not come off her feet. Elphaba sees that Dorothy is magically locked tight inside of them. Dorothy tearfully admits to Elphaba that the wizard did indeed send her to kill Elphaba. But Dorothy just wanted to find an alternative way to go home as she believes Elphaba is a witch and witches have magical powers. Dorothy wanted to give Elphaba the shoes if she would help her. Dorothy was so desperate to go home and would do anything to leave, even if it meant going to Elphaba who could have killed her.

Elphaba melts

Dorothy Gale confronts The Wicked Witch of the West, Elphaba Thropp in Wicked.

Elphaba is physiologically and emotionally crippled by Dorothy's honest pleas for forgiveness for killing her sister. Elphaba then becomes furious since she never received any absolution for her sins. As it became apparent, Elphaba briefly realizes that Dorothy really was an innocent human girl from another world just trying to find her way home again. Elphaba waves her burning broom in the air and, not paying attention to her surroundings, the hot sparks caught on her black dress and cape, setting her ablaze. Dorothy tries to save Elphaba and put out the fire by tossing a bucket of water at her, but to her horror, the water melts the Witch away, instantly killing her by accident instead of saving her. After the Wicked Witch is dead, Dorothy took a green bottle called "Miracle Elixir" with her to prove to the Wizard she was at Kiamo Ko. She did not take the Grimmerie because it was simply too heavy to carry.

Afterwards Dorothy is hailed as a messiah of some sort and mass celebration is thrown throughout all of Oz, mostly amoung the loyal Ozians. When the Wizard fails to keep his promise to Dorothy, she goes to Glinda for help and learns she had the power to go back to Kansas through the magic of the shoes.

It is rumored by the Ozians that when Dorothy was sent home, she was seen descending up into the sky in the direction of her homeland, waving her apron giddily and carrying that "damn fool dog". Other conspiracy theorists believe Dorothy never left Oz at all.

Son of a Witch

The story picks up right after Elphaba's tragic death. Liir, her oddball son, accompanies Dorothy, her dog Toto, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion back to the Emerald City to see the Wizard again after successfully completing their task. On the way, Liir forms a small crush on Dorothy, becoming secretly infatuated with her.

While traveling through the Vinkus, Dorothy and the group all meet a shapeshifting Princess who is also the head leader of her native tribe, the Scrow. The Princesses name is Nastoya who appeared to the group as a human girl but was originally an Elephant at birth. Nastoya explains to them all that because of the Wizard and his prejudice veiws against Animals, she disguised herself and vailed her true form as a clever shield of protection. Yet Nastoya confesses she is finding it increasingly difficult to switch forms which leads her to believe she is dying.

As so, Nastoya shockingly morphs herself and transforms right infront of Dorothy and her companions which is described to be revolting to watch as Nastoya's skin stretches and her bones shift and body mutates. Seeing this, Dorothy nearly vomits in her apron and Toto passes out.

When Dorothy reaches the Emerald City, Liir is told to wait outside the Wizard's palace while Dorothy and her friends step inside to speak with Oz. She could not get the Wizard the Grimmerie because it was too heavy to take with her but she gave him the green bottle he found familiar. Not only did Dorothy and her fellow comrades learn that the Wizard was not so great and powerful because he's a mere humbug human, and that he was the real antagonist who used deceit and trickery to get his way, but he was also the illegitimate father of Elphaba. Dorothy was going to leave Oz with the Wizard in a hot air balloon, but he already left, because everyone learned the truth about him, his empire started to collapse and he seemingly left Oz back to America.

Glinda then steps in and sends Dorothy home through the magic of the shoes.

Despite Dorothy's promise to come back to say goodbye to Liir before returning to Kansas, Dorothy leaves without a proper farewell, leaving Liir heartbroken. Despite this, Liir ultimately does not hold it against Dorothy because he understands how eager she was to get back home again.

A Lion Among Men

Dorothy makes a brief appearance when Brrr, the Cowardly Lion first encounters her after he abandons city life to live in the wilderness of Oz. He meets the girl on the yellow brick road when she is already accompanied by the Scarecrow and Nick Chopper, the Tin Man. Brrr then travels With Dorothy to Emerald City and to Kiamo Ko when the Wizard demands the group to kill Elphaba.

It is also revealed in this novel, that Uncle Henry and Aunt Em are not blood related to Dorothy. They actually wrote an orphanage in Missouri asking for an orphan to help on the Kansas farm.

Out of Oz

It is explained that Dorothy was teleported home, flying over the land of Oz and back to Kansas thanks to the power of the silver shoes. Unfortunately, Dorothy lost the pair as they fell off of her feet on the flight back and were gone forever. Nevertheless, Dorothy reappeared on the horizon, shoeless but still in one piece on the prairie and of course, holding Toto in her arms.

Due to her extended disappearance and unexplainable survival from the cyclone, the other children at the Kansas Schoolhouse shunned Dorothy and labeled her a freak of nature for riding the winds of a twister and living to tell about it. Nonetheless suddenly reappearing out of nowhere months later. And Dorothy's tales of Oz, only make her seem completely crazy. Thus, making her un-marrigeable and "ungodly".

Six years later, Dorothy and Toto are unexpectedly sent to Oz by fate once again. But now she is approximately sixteen years old. Even though it has been less than a decade since Dorothy's first visit to Oz, it has been around twenty years in Oz's time.

Back in Kansas, Dorothy's relatives never believed her stories about Oz and criticised her for having her head in the clouds and sabotaging her future. To help Dorothy forget about Oz, Em and Henry decide to take a trip to San Fransisco on vacation. However, after sight seeing, Dorothy ends up being trapped with Toto in a motel elevator when a earthquake hits California. (Believed to be the same California earthquake from 1906).

When the building collapses, the elevator that Dorothy is in falls into the bowels of the earth and into another dimension. The elevator falls from the sky and accidentally landed on a cow and kills it. And Toto was somehow lost in the process when the small dog fell out of the elevator doors which were cracked just enough for Toto to slip through.

Dorothy was buried alive under all the rocks and pieces of the earth that the earthquake brought down along with the elevator. Luckily, the elevator was found by nearby locals who dug Dorothy up and saved her. Dorothy suffered from a temporary state of amnesia and a bump on her head which gave her a near concussion. She is taken in by strangers and nursed back to health. Dorothy spends many months recuperating from the traumatic event and slowly gains her memory back.

When Dorothy's health strengthens, she realizes she is back in Oz again, specifically in the country of Oz's Glikkus tribe. Dorothy learns that Oz has fallen into war and the Glikkun trolls extradited her to Munchkinland's new capital, Bright Lettins, where the new Eminence has her stand trial for the murders of Saint Nessarose and Saint Elphaba Thropp, calling it "regicide." Dorothy is imprisoned against her will and is used as a mere scapegoat who was left accountable for the deaths of the two Thropp sisters who died decades prior. And sure enough, the overall court case finds Dorothy guilty and she is sentenced. But to Dorothy's surprise her old friend Brrr, the Cowardly Lion, came to her aid. The Lion was also accompanied by Mr. Boss, and Little Daffy who helped rescue Dorothy from her harsh sentence. The group then immediately high tail it out of Munchkinland before "things get ugly". Eventually Brrr is made the Throne Minister of Oz until the long lost Princess Ozma of Oz comes of age to take the throne.

Dorothy is finally reunited with her dog Toto whom she thought was dead and the Grimmerie was used to send Dorothy and Toto back to California where she is presumably reunited with her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.

In the Musical

Even though Dorothy plays an important role in this story, her face is never seen, only her backside in the book illustrations, and her silhouette in the musical.

Dorothy Gale

Madame Morrible, the headmistress of Shiz University and the antagonist (along with The Wizard) in the musical version of Wicked has control over the weather and killed Nessarose, The Wicked Witch of the East by bringing a cyclone from Kansas which brought it's resident Dorothy Gale. Glinda gives Dorothy Nessarose's Ruby slippers. She would befriend the Cowardly Lion, the Scarecrow and the Tin Man while being sent by the Wizard to kill the Wicked Witch of the West. She throws water at her which she believes melts her. Dorothy is present in the popular Broadway musical Wicked, but she is never actually seen; when the main characters interact with her, they speak into direction of the wings, or into a trapdoor, as if she is sitting offstage and out of the view of the audience.

Dorot

Dorothy melting Elphaba in the musical.

Dorothy does appear on the stage during a pivotal scene, but the audience sees only her silhouette. The shadows of the performers being back lit onto a scrim that is drawn across the stage by Elphaba to protect Glinda. Contrary to popular belief, the melting is performed in real time every performance, and Dorothy is played - in full costume, by the Glinda understudy.

However, in n the Helsinki City Theatre production (and subsequent non replicate productions thereafter), Dorothy appears several times throughout the musical in key scenes, such as in the Cornfields skipping happily along the yellow brick road and finally in the Melting scene throwing water at Elphaba. She was originally portrayed by Saara Aalto.

Trivia

  • Dorothy Gale originally wore silver shoes with pointed toes in L. Frank Baum's 1900 novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, not Ruby Slippers like in the 1939 MGM musical film version.
  • In the 1900 book, the character of Dorothy is no older than 10 years old, yet Judy Garland was 16 when she portrayed Dorothy in the 1939 film. In the film, Dorothy is supposed to be 12 years old.
  • Dorothy does not sing in the Oz books.
  • In the Oz books, the fate of Dorothy's parents is never revealed. In Wicked, it is said Dorothy's parents died in a boating accident and she was then adopted by Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.