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Theatre

‘How being Jewish helps me play the Wicked Witch of the West’

Actor Emma Kingston on why she is relishing playing Elphaba in West End smash Wicked

May 1, 2025 14:48
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Bewitching: Emma Kingston (left) and on stage as Elphaba at the Apollo Victoria Theatre in the West End
4 min read

Emma Kingston has always felt like an outsider. At her Jewish schools – Rosh Pinah Primary in Edgware, followed by Immanuel College in Hertfordshire – she was the weird kid who liked singing (she still has her signed primary school shirt on which fellow pupils had written “stop singing” on their last day). When she was at Mountview drama school, then in Wood Green, she was the Jewish girl who, when she asked to take a day off for Yom Kippur and to finish early so she could attend a Seder, was told, “You’ll never work in this industry if you want to take those days off.”

She first saw Wicked, the Wizard of Oz prequel written by fellow Jews Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman, when she was 15 and “absolutely lost my mind”. And she fell in love with the story of fellow outsider Elphaba.

The show tells the story of how the green-skinned Elphaba becomes the Wicked Witch of the West and since it first opened on Broadway, in 2003 it has been a huge hit around the world.

“I’d never seen a show which encapsulates not only so much vocal agility but also so much heart,” she says. “I loved The Wizard of Oz and thought it was genius how the story was interwoven. And I really felt like I understood Elphaba’s story. I wasn’t bullied at school but I was that strange kid who liked theatre, and I was quite happy on a lunch break to sit in the music room by myself playing piano.