Browse by musical

Hail – Hail! The Witch is Dead Lyrics Wizard Of Oz, The

Hail – Hail! The Witch is Dead Lyrics

Play song video
(Ding Dong, The Witch is Dead)

Munchkins
Ding Dong! The Witch is dead. Which old Witch? The Wicked Witch!
Ding Dong! The Wicked Witch is dead.
Wake up - sleepy head, rub your eyes, get out of bed.
Wake up, the Wicked Witch is dead. She's gone where the goblins go,
Below - below - below. Yo-ho, let's open up and sing and ring the bells out.
Ding Dong' the merry-oh, sing it high, sing it low.
Let them know
The Wicked Witch is dead!
Mayor
As Mayor of the Munchkin City, In the County of the Land of Oz, I welcome you most regally.
Barrister
But we've got to verify it legally, to see
Mayor
To see?
Barrister
If she
Mayor
If she?
Barrister
Is morally, ethic'lly
Father No.1
Spiritually, physically
Father No. 2
Positively, absolutely
Munchkins
Undeniably and reliably Dead
Coroner
As Coroner I must aver, I thoroughly examined her.
And she's not only merely dead, she's really most sincerely dead.
Mayor
Then this is a day of Independence For all the Munchkins and their descendants
Barrister
If any.
Mayor
Yes, let the joyous news be spread The wicked Old Witch at last is dead!

Song Overview

Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead (Reprise) lyrics by David Ganly, Paul Keating, Edward Baker-Duly, Danielle Hope, Nigel Wright, Andrew Lloyd Webber
Cast voices ring out on the London Palladium album cut widely issued as “Hail-Hail! The Witch Is Dead.”

Review and Highlights

Scene from Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead (Reprise) by David Ganly, Paul Keating, Edward Baker-Duly, Danielle Hope
The reprise returns as a post-melting celebration before the company heads back to the Wizard.

Quick summary

  1. Company number from The Wizard of Oz (2011 London Palladium Recording), placed late in Act II after the Witch’s defeat.
  2. Music by Harold Arlen, lyrics by E. Y. Harburg; the 2011 track is commonly titled “Hail Hail! The Witch Is Dead” on official releases.
  3. Leads include Danielle Hope, Paul Keating, Edward Baker-Duly, David Ganly with the ensemble, produced by Nigel Wright and Andrew Lloyd Webber.
  4. Brisk, punchy choral shout that reprises the Munchkinland anthem in a victory frame.
  5. Links directly to the throne-room payoff, functioning as a crowd-wide exhale and scene change.

Creation History

The reprise traces back to the 1939 film’s cutting room: a short “Hail Hail! The Witch Is Dead” celebration after the melting was recorded but dropped from the final cut. Elements resurfaced on deluxe soundtrack issues decades later. The 2011 London staging reinstated that beat in streamlined form, and the cast album preserves it under the “Hail-Hail!” title, slotting it as track 22 between “The Rescue” and “The Wizard’s Departure.” The release rolled out digitally in spring 2011 with a U.S. CD following in late June.

Highlights

Everything lands on snap and clarity. Tight chorus writing, bright percussion, and a lyric that feels like confetti. The energy flips the earlier, anxious Oz into communal relief, letting Dorothy’s team soak up a rare moment of triumph before the next ask.

Song Meaning and Annotations

Cast performing Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead (Reprise)
Video moments that reveal the meaning.

Plot

After the Wicked Witch’s defeat, the travelers and townsfolk break into a compact reprise. Bells metaphorically ring, voices stack, and the crew pivots toward the Wizard with proof of the deed. The number is a reset button - short, loud, forward.

Song Meaning

It’s civic catharsis. Where the Act I sequence sells relief in Munchkinland, this reprise sells release in the Witch’s shadow. The chorus doubles as proof of change of power - tyrant gone, people audible again. Mood: jubilant and a little rowdy.

Annotations

“Wake up, you sleepy head, rub your eyes, get out of bed”

A wake-up call to a silenced city. The line started life in the Munchkinland medley; here it reappears as a wider civic alarm.

“She’s gone where the goblins go - below”

Cartoonish diction with bite. The rhyme compresses judgment and geography into one stomp.

“Let them know the Wicked Witch is dead”

A thesis in plain speech. No metaphors needed when a regime ends.

Shot of Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead (Reprise)
Short scene, big swing: victory, proof, and onward.
Style and instrumentation

Up-tempo show-chorus with crisp brass and snare. Voices lead, band shines, and the cadence is built for quick blackout or crossfade.

Context

The 2011 score threads legacy songs with new material. By restoring this post-melting cheer, the production echoes the film’s shelved idea and keeps the road back to the Wizard buoyant. According to Playbill and Broadway trade coverage, the album’s sequence reflects the onstage running order.

Key Facts

  • Artist: David Ganly, Paul Keating, Edward Baker-Duly, Danielle Hope, Nigel Wright, Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Featured: Dorothy, Scarecrow, Tin Man, Lion, Emerald City ensemble
  • Composer: Harold Arlen
  • Lyricist: E. Y. Harburg
  • Producers: Nigel Wright; Andrew Lloyd Webber
  • Release Date: May 9, 2011
  • Genre: Musical theatre
  • Instruments: Orchestra with brass, reeds, rhythm section, chorus
  • Label: Polydor - under license from The Really Useful Group
  • Mood: Triumphant, celebratory
  • Length: approx. 1:50–1:55 on digital listings
  • Track #: 22 on the London Palladium cast album
  • Language: English
  • Album: The Wizard of Oz (2011 London Palladium Recording)
  • Music style: March-tinged show chorus
  • Poetic meter: Patter-couplets into refrain

Canonical Entities & Relations

Harold Arlen - composed - original film music
E. Y. Harburg - wrote - original film lyrics
Andrew Lloyd Webber - produced - 2011 cast album; created new songs elsewhere in the score
Nigel Wright - produced - 2011 cast album
Danielle Hope - performed - Dorothy
Paul Keating - performed - Scarecrow
Edward Baker-Duly - performed - Tin Man
David Ganly - performed - Cowardly Lion
London Palladium - hosted - 2011 West End run
Decca Broadway - released - U.S. physical edition in June 2011

Questions and Answers

Why is the 2011 track often titled “Hail-Hail! The Witch Is Dead”?
That phrase comes from the film’s unused post-melting reprise. The London album adopts it as the cut’s official title while audiences still recognize it as a reprise of the familiar anthem.
Where does it fall in the running order?
After “The Rescue,” before “The Wizard’s Departure,” just ahead of the finale churn.
Is this version different from the Act I celebration?
Yes - shorter, faster, and scored as a victory tag rather than a full set-piece.
Was this ever a standalone single?
No. It circulates inside the full 2011 cast album.
Any notable covers of this specific reprise?
Covers typically reference the original film song; the reprise title mainly appears on stage albums and concert revivals.
What does the lyric accomplish dramatically?
It certifies the Witch’s defeat to the citizens and to the Wizard - a musical receipt stapled to the plot.
Why restore a cut idea from 1939?
To give the audience a release after the castle peril and to smooth the tonal pivot back to Emerald City business.

Awards and Chart Positions

Production recognition: The 2011 London production received an Olivier Award nomination for Best Musical Revival in 2012. No single-format chart entries are documented for this reprise; the track is part of the full cast recording.

Additional Info

The base song has a long cultural tail. According to the Wikipedia overview, it hit number 2 on the UK Singles Chart in 2013 via a protest-driven download campaign. That’s the original film chorus, not this late-Act reprise - but the echo helps explain why the 2011 team kept a celebratory tag in the score. Playbill and BroadwayWorld’s release notes fix the album sequence and confirm the U.S. distribution. Apple Music and Discogs listings show the reprise circulating under the “Hail-Hail!” title with a sub-two-minute runtime.

Sources: Playbill, BroadwayWorld, Discogs, CastAlbums, Wikipedia, Apple Music, Spotify, YouTube.

Music video


Wizard Of Oz, The Lyrics: Song List

  1. Act 1
  2. Overture
  3. Nobody Understands Me
  4. Over The Rainbow
  5. Wonders of the World
  6. The Twister
  7. Tornado (Cyclone)
  8. Come Out, Come Out...
  9. It Really Was No Miracle
  10. Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead
  11. Arrival In Munchkinland
  12. We Welcome You to Munchkinland
  13. Follow The Yellow Brick Road!
  14. If I Only Had A Brain
  15. If I Only Had A Heart
  16. If I Only Had the Nerve
  17. Optimistic Voices / We're Outta The Woods
  18. Merry Old Land of Oz
  19. Bring Me The Broomstick
  20. Poppies / Act I Finale
  21. Act 2
  22. Haunted Forest
  23. March of the Winkies
  24. Red Shoes Blues
  25. Red Shoes Blues (Reprise)
  26. Jitterbug
  27. Over The Rainbow (Reprise)
  28. If We Only Had a Plan
  29. The Rescue - Melting
  30. Hail – Hail! The Witch is Dead
  31. The Wizard’s Departure
  32. Already Home
  33. Finale

Popular musicals