Win Tickets To Wicked

Wicked-posterIn order to win tickets to WICKED you have to know when WICKED is coming to your city. Broadway Across America is a great website to find out about all touring Broadway shows. Once you find out that your city is part of the tour, mark your calendars to win tickets to Wicked. Most local radio stations will host contests to win tickets to Wicked about a week or two before the tour arrives in town.

Also pay close attention to your local TV channels; you might see an advertisement for Wicked then a blurb about how to win tickets to Wicked. Take a moment to log on to your local radio station and local TV station’s websites to become members of their clubs and you will find unadvertised contests just for members to win tickets to Wicked and other shows and all you have to do is just login and enter. Read the contest rules carefully about how often you can enter but most likely it will be once a week.

Make it a habit to check the radio and tv stations websites on a Monday, as they list new contests that day that run for the week. By Thursday they will select and call the winners and notify them of what they have won and how they can claim it.

Please note that you will have to fill out paperwork and a tax form to claim your prize. The tax form will require a social security number. I would suggest not to give that information over the phone but wait until you can go to the radio or tv station to fill out the paperwork and pickup the prize.

Audiences have embraced the musical WICKED – The Untold Story of the Witches of Oz and made it a box office smash. WICKED sheds light on just how two seemingly opposite girls and unlikely to be friends become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good. WICKED the musical is based on the book Wicked – The Life and Time of the Wicked Witch of the West written by Gregory Maguire.

A piece of WICKED trivia to keep under your witch hat or tiara:
In the musical and the novel we finally find out the name of the wicked witch, Elphaba. It is pronounced EL-phaba, with the pronunciation on the first three syllables. The name Elphaba comes from the initials of the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: Lyman Frank Baum. (L. F. B. = Elphaba).