On Sunday, April 12th, Frank and I took Alex to see The Wizard of Oz on Ice playing at our local Bankhead theater. On ice... really? Would the Bankhead risk having some sort of container for the frozen water on their hardwood stage? Our decision to go was based largely on curiosity. The only way to learn was to attend. Other questions: would the show be like an Ice Capades, like the original Wizard of Oz movie, like the recent movie Wicked, or like the musical The Wiz? Answers? Yes, a blend of all four. Read on.


There were few to no three-dimensional props on the "ice" surface where the performers would be skating; I assume this arrangement was to give them unhampered gliding movement. The performers really were ice skating on blades, not roller skating on wheels. They did jumps (Axel, Lutz, Salchow), spins (Camel, Sit, Layback), and flips as seen in the Olympics. I was curious about the "frozen water" onstage which I learned was synthetic ice. The skating surface was installed on the wooden stage in abutted 70 lb panels of a solid high-density polyethylene or other polymer. Synthetic ice gives a gliding surface to skaters, but requires about 10% more effort, thus providing a more intense workout such as running in sand or jogging along the wave waterline at a beach would do. The joy of an effortless glide is somewhat reduced; hockey players reportedly like the extra strengthening workout they gain.



- The show was somewhat like the Ice Capades because of the skating and a loose impossible-to-follow background story played over speakers. Conversations were lip synched by the actors.
- It was like the original Wizard of Oz movie in that it started out in Kansas, but at the end there was no tieback to the farmhands in a their roles at Lion, Tin Man and Scarecrow.
- It had some resemblance to the modern movie Wicked in some of the flamboyant colors of costuming, even a blacklight lit sequence in neon colored outfits.
- The songs were completely unfamiliar and the lyrics undecipherable similar to what Frank and I found when we saw the musical The Wiz. Ease on Down the Road from The Wiz was an exception but this song was not in The Wizard of Oz on Ice.
- I am used to actors facing each other and taking a certain pose during conversational exchanges. Skaters had to keep moving in constant motion which sat awkwardly with me during dialog exchanges.
- Any concept of a set was portrayed by an image or set of images projected on a screen at the back of the stage. The enjoyment of marveling at set creativity or being fascinated with rapid changes in set was absent; however, the projected depiction of a tornado was very well done.
- There was no singing of Somewhere Over the Rainbow. The music for the show was more upbeat and not as solemn as a ballad would be. I still missed it though. The final curtain did give tribute to a rainbow however.




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