July 23, 2007

Witches and TV

Traditionally, witches are women (but can be men) who are possessed of supernatural abilities which are said to be obtained by consorting with the Devil. However, in reality, witches are those who choose another path of worship which centers on a matriarchal paradigm (mother nature or the earth mother). The modern day church of Wicca, for example.
Though the centuries, a witch has been thought of as an evil creature devoid of beauty. In the Shakespearean tradition as in the play of Macbeth, witches are depicted as gnarled, ugly, and old. This image of ugly compliments the Christian church of good and evil whereas a follower of God such as an Angel is bright and beautiful whereas the follower of the Devil must be dark and ugly.
The fact that a witch had to be dark and evil supported the Christians belief that anyone outside of their belief system (Pagans) was an enemy to God (as they perceived Him). Being dark and evil, witches were vilified. To be labeled a witch, was to be given a sentence of death. This labeling, of course, was just another control mechanism imposed by a male centered society to control the females in their midst. Power was for men, not women.
Conveniently, the Christian religion (and non-Christian beliefs) has manufactured a world view of what a witch is, namely people associated with Devil worship, child sacrifice, Black Covens, etc. This world view impacts negatively on innocent group of people (Pagans) who are labeled as witches because they choose to follow religious practices that predates Christianity, for example.
This conditions the society to hate the other group. By calling a group a "witch" (with all its built in meanings of hate and dehumanization), this allows all supposed true believers to justify their hatred and destruction of the other group. After all, if witches are subhuman, they must be destroyed or at the very least controlled as an animal is controlled by its master.
In the 20th century, the concept of witches consorting with the Devil and seen as gnarled, ugly, and old continues especially in the popular media. For example, in such movies as the full-length Disney animated cartoon Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1938) and the classic film The Wizard of Oz (1939) where Margaret Hamilton played the evil green-skinned Wicked Witch of the West.
Even into the 1990s, the tradition of the witch as being evil continued as in the film Hocus Pocus (1993) with Bette Midler, Kathy Najimy and Sarah Jessica Parker as three witches who wreak havoc on Salem Massachusetts after being resurrected from the dead on All Hallow's Eve; and Anjelica Houston as a witch at a witch convention who intends to eat all the children of the world in The Witches (1990).
Luckily, witches have not been fully disparaged. There have been a few along the way with some saving graces such as Billy Burke as Glinda, the Good Witch of the North in the film The Wizard of Oz (1939); the seductive Veronica Lake in I Married a Witch (1942); and the curvaceous Kim Novak in Bell, Book and Candle (1958). And with the introduction of television, such characters as Samantha, Sabrina and Willow the witch (all good) have helped mellow the perceptions that all witches are evil.
In the end, the word "witch" is like a tool. It is neither good nor bad unto itself. It is not the word that we should fear, but rather the intentions in the hearts of those who call themselves such who pickup this tool and do their biding on society. After all, there are in this world, only two kinds of people: Good and Evil - and either can be witches.
Aunt Singe (G)
Belfry Witches (B)
Benita Bizarre (B)
Buelah the Witch (G)
Halliwell Sisters (Prue, Piper, Phoebe & Paige) (G)
Maeve the Sorceress (G)
Mildred Hubble (G)
Queen Lillian (B)
Rowena the Sorceress (G)
Sabrina Spellman (G)
Samantha Stephens (G)
Sorceress, The (B)
Tabitha Lenox (B)
Tabitha Stephens (G)
Willow Rosenberg (G)
Winnie Goodwin (G)
Witch, The (G)
Witchiepoo (B)



As you can see witches have been in tv for a very long time. And I’m sure they will continue to captivate everyone for years to come. (Most of this information was courtesy of TV ACRES.com) One of my favorite movies is with Kim Novak ‘Bell, Book and Candle’ which I mention in my book as Logan’s favorite movie. Do you have a favorite witch from tv?

4 Comments:

At July 24, 2007 7:14 AM , Blogger Naomi said...

I never really saw very many witch films or TV shows growing up. I do vividly remember The Worst Witch (a YA book) being made into a TV series. I think they just started a new one too.

 
At July 26, 2007 4:31 PM , Blogger Nicole said...

I never saw many witch shows, either. But then, I never saw many shows, period. (Rarely watched TV as a kid, or now for that matter.) I guess my favorite witch would probably be Glinda, in part because I got to play her in my 5th grade play. And I really wanted to ride in a bubble, the way she does in the film, but no such luck. Ah well. :)

 
At July 26, 2007 6:29 PM , Blogger LA Burton said...

We had a lot of witches on tv here. I love Bewitched.

 
At August 02, 2007 9:10 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

There was a version of the Belfry Witches done for children's TV when I was growing up (mischievous but good)but one of the actresses died and there was never another series. I always liked Willow in Buffy, she was geeky and alienated and I could relate to that.

 

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