45 Famous Witches From Pop Culture to Channel This Halloween
Witches have been a subject of pop culture fascination for literal centuries. Seem like an overstatement? Don’t forget famous witches in mythology, like Morgan Le Fay — the sorceress who first appears in Arthurian legend in 1150 — and Circe, the witch in the The Odyssey, believed to have been written in the 8th or 7th century BC. (The archetypal inspiration for Circe may be even older, for the record.) We've always been bewitched by witches, from the casters of spells in childhood fairytales right up to the modern witches next door of American Horror Story: Coven.
Of course, real witches today are totally different from the fairytales. There is no singular path to being a witch; it can look like practicing paganism, focusing on specific ancestral or folk traditions, or finding meaning in things like astrology, tarot, and candle rituals. No matter your method, setting intentions and staying connected — to ourselves, to nature, and to each other — often play roles in witchcraft. Rather than being bound up by gender or fixed rules, for many practitioners, it’s simply about reclaiming personal and collective power — black cats and whimsical wardrobes optional. (Though let’s be real, the aesthetic is half the fun!)
With the witching season upon us, we figured it was only right to tip our (pointed) hats to pop culture’s most famous witches in history. From notable witches in literature to cinema’s iconic crones and famous modern witches on TV, they’ve cast their magic across generations — shaping how we see power, rebellion, and a little well-placed chaos. So keep your wands at the ready, because something wonderfully wicked this way comes.
- 1/45
THE SANDERSON SISTERS
Winifred, Mary, and Sarah Sanderson were put to death in 1600s Salem, but an ill-timed spell brings them back to life on Halloween three centuries later. Hocus Pocus remains the kind of Halloween movie magic that never fades — funny, a little spooky, and endlessly rewatchable. (We only wish we could say the same of the sequel!)
- 2/45
THE WICKED WITCH OF THE WEST
“I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too!” The ultimate green villain of The Wizard of Oz (or the misunderstood Elphaba, depending on who you ask) terrified generations of kids with a cackle that could curdle milk and her entourage of flying monkeys.
- 3/45
GLINDA, THE GOOD WITCH
The Wicked Witch’s glittering foil, Glinda ruled Oz with a kind heart, a cloud of pink tulle, and a voice so sweet it could charm Munchkins for miles. Of course, in her own way, she was a little wicked too — because seriously, why didn’t she just tell Dorothy the slippers would send her home from the start? Wicked peels back her perfection, with Ariana Grande’s Glinda reminding us that being “good” is sometimes be code for pressure and performance.
- 4/45
URSULA
In our opinion, The Little Mermaid’s Ursula is Disney’s most iconic (sea) witch. She steals Ariel’s voice, can shapeshift into a certified hottie named Vanessa, and goes tentacle-to-trident with King Triton, who frankly deserved a downfall. Call us Flotsam and Jetsam, because we’re a little obsessed.
- 5/45
BONNIE BENNETT
The Vampire Diaries’ resident good witch, Bonnie, was always the one cleaning up everyone else’s supernatural mess. Steadfast and selfless, she used her powers to protect the people she loved — even when it cost her dearly. She may have lost her magic more than once, but her strength never really disappeared.
- 6/45
QUEEN RAVENNA
Hello, fairest and fiercest of them all! No one is more lethally glamorous than Charlize Theron’s wicked Queen Ravenna, a famous sorceress so vain and vengeful she’ll even transform into a flock of birds to take down Snow White. With a wardrobe of molten gold and a stare that could shatter mirrors, she made villainy look like high fashion.
- 7/45
FIONA GOODE
Jessica Lange’s Fiona Goode was the Supreme Witch of American Horror Story: Coven. All ego and elegance, she ruled her coven with a sharp wit, sharper cheekbones, and a ruthless fear of losing control. Her hunger for youth and power made her both terrifying and spellbinding to watch, and the outfits didn’t hurt either.
- 9/45
WILLOW ROSENBERG
Buffy’s best friend and the brainiest member of the Scooby Gang, Willow discovers she’s a witch early on, and her power only grows stronger. But as any good witch knows, sometimes magic comes with a cost, and Willow’s story proves just how thin the line between light and dark can be.
- 10/45
Marie Laveau
Before famous modern witches in pop culture, there was Marie Laveau, the real Voodoo Queen of New Orleans. Born a free woman of color in 1801, she became a religious leader, healer, community activist, and entrepreneur, running her own beauty parlor while working as an herbalist and midwife. As the city’s third Voodoo priestess, she wove together traditions — from conjure to Catholicism — in a way that still echoes throughout New Orleans, where visitors continue to leave offerings at her tomb. For a mainstream audience, Angela Bassett’s AHS: Coven portrayal helped make Laveau immortal all over again.
- 11/45
THE CRAFT CREW
Nancy, Bonnie, Rochelle, and Sarah are the ultimate teen coven — powerful, chaotic, and a little too good at getting what they want. Sarah’s the “natural” witch of the group, born with her magic while the others have to earn theirs, which obviously causes no envy or infighting whatsoever.
- 12/45
THE WHITE WITCH
Memorably brought to life by Tilda Swinton, the White Witch (a.k.a. Jadis) is the titular witch in The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, ruling Narnia with an icy grip. In Greta Gerwig’s upcoming adaptation, Sex Education star Emma Mackey will take on the role of the famous sorceress, and we’ll be honest: Riding around a winter wonderland with Mackey in a sleigh filled with Turkish Delight treats doesn’t sound like our idea of a bad time.
- 14/45
THE HALLIWELL SISTERS
Unlike the Sanderson Sisters, the Halliwell girls of Charmed fame use their powers for good — most of the time. Together, Prue, Piper, Phoebe, and later Paige balanced dates and sister squabbles with demon fighting, all while wearing some seriously covetable ‘90s fashion.
- 16/45
ENDORA
Samantha’s mother, Endora, is a little more out-there than her buttoned-up suburban daughter, and she’s constantly trying to cause chaos in her daughter’s marriage to the mortal Darrin. A drama queen through and through, she’s flamboyant, opinionated, and allergic to men. What’s not to love?
- 17/45
Calypso/Tia Dalma
She’s got a smoky voice, cryptic advice, and a candle-filled swamp shack we’d give our left arm for. (Is that just us?) When we first meet Tia Dalma in Dead Man’s Chest, she’s a mysterious witch helping Jack Sparrow bargain with the sea. But by At World’s End, her full power — and true identity as Calypso, goddess of the sea — finally rises to the surface.
- 18/45
HERMIONE GRANGER
You can’t talk about well-known witches today without Hermoine’s name being mentioned. Booksmart, brave, and never afraid to call the boys out, she was the glue that held Hogwarts’ favorite trio together. Together, her intellect and unwavering moral compass made her the backbone of every adventure and the patron saint of overachievers everywhere.
- 19/45
PROFESSOR MINERVA MCGONAGALL
Portrayed to perfection by Dame Maggie Smith, Professor McGonagall is the no-nonsense head of Gryffindor and, later, Headmistress of Hogwarts. Disciplined, brilliant, and unshakeably brave, she can just as easily transform into a cat as she can duel Death Eaters and put tyrants in their place, all while maintaining her trademark poise.
- 20/45
LOUISE MILLER
The titular teen in Teen Witch, Louise (played by Robyn Lively — yes, Blake’s sister!) inherits her magical abilities when she turns 16. So, she does what just about any teenager in the ‘80s would do upon learning they’re a witch: she uses her powers to become popular. Louise’s campy, palm-reading mentor Madame Serena deserves a shout out here, too.
- 22/45
HILDA & ZELDA SPELLMAN
Every teen witch could use a little guidance, and Sabrina hit the jackpot with her two aunts. In both Sabrina the Teenage Witch and The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, the aunts are wise, witty, and wonderfully opposite, with Zelda supplying the logic and Hilda the heart. Whether from the sitcom’s cozy kitchen or the reboot’s Gothic mansion, they keep the Spellman household running like only witches can.
- 24/45
THE GRAND HIGH WITCH
Keep the witchy Anjelica Huston flicks coming! A year before she was Morticia, Huston played the Grand High Witch in The Witches, based on the Roald Dahl book of the same name. We’re pretty sure no GHW has ever had a better bangs game — before she transforms into a monstrous Jim Henson creation, that is.
- 26/45
THE BLAIR WITCH
She’s perhaps the most famous witch to ever be faceless. The Blair Witch from the original cult film stays scary because you never see her — you only see what she might have done, which is honestly way creepier. The 2016 follow-up, The Blair Witch, didn’t take that lesson to heart, but hopefully the coming reboot does.
- 27/45
LUZ NOCEDA
Witches are inherently subversive, flipping societal expectations for women and femme people’s behavior — and even the very construct of gender itself — on their head. Despite that, and despite magic having a clear connection to queer identity, many of our famous witch characters in pop culture still feel pretty heteronormative.
That made Luz Noceda, the protagonist of Disney’s animated series The Owl House, a breath of fresh air. As a queer, neurodivergent, Afro-Latina teen who accidentally stumbles into a magical realm, Luz (voiced by Sarah-Nicole Robles) turns witchcraft into a story about identity and agency. Her love interest Amity Blight (voiced by Mae Whitman) deserves a nod, too — especially since Whitman shouted Amity’s impact out when coming out as queer herself.
- 28/45
THE OWENS SISTERS
In Practical Magic, sisters Sally and Gillian Owens (Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman) inherit generations of witchy power — along with a family curse that makes love just a little complicated. Breaking curses is nothing to sweat when you’ve got your sister by your side, though. Can’t wait for the sequel? Hang onto your husbands, girls, because we’re still a whole spooky season away.
- 29/45
AUNT JET AND AUNT FRANCES
Something about being an elder aunt just naturally invites witchiness. In Practical Magic, Aunt Jet and Aunt Frances (Dianne Wiest and Stockard Channing) definitely aren’t beating the witchcraft allegations — they’re too busy showing the youngest Owens sisters how to brew potions, defy gossip, and make the perfect midnight margarita. It’s also to Frances we owe the line: "My darling girl, when are you going to realize that being 'normal' is not necessarily a virtue?”
- 30/45
THE TWITCHES
Giving “double, double, toil and trouble” new meaning, twin sisters Alex and Camryn (Tia and Tamera Mowry) meet for the first time on their 21st birthday — and, in the process, discover they’re witches destined to save a magical realm called Coventry. Peak Disney Channel Original Movie nostalgia, it’s like a mash-up of The Parent Trap, Sister, Sister, and Teen Witch, but in the Y2K era.
- 31/45
THE WEIRD SISTERS
We know, we know — there’s been a lot of the Sabrina-verse on this list already. But the Weird Sisters go back a lot farther than that. In Macbeth, they’re the witches who prophesize doom and make kings go mad. And, yes, in The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, they’re back, this time as magical mean girls with a soft spot for dark lipstick and lacey collars.
- 33/45
SYPHA BELNADES
Technically, Sypha Belnades isn’t a witch. But when you’re slinging elemental magic and taking down vampires in Castlevania, the distinction starts to feel like semantics. A Speaker Magician with command over fire, ice, lightning, and sarcasm, she more than holds her own against Night Creatures, Dracula, and mansplainers.
- 34/45
PANNOCHKA
In the 1960s Soviet folk horror film Viy, a priest is forced to pray over the body of a witch who refuses to stay dead. To get to the real point here: the witch, Pannochka, can ride a flying coffin like it’s a surfboard, all while rocking a diaphanous white nightgown and daisy crown that could just be the makings of your next Halloween costume.
- 35/45
ELAINE PARKER
Speaking of a witch ripe for cute Halloween costume inspo, show us an outfit from The Love Witch that Lana Del Rey wouldn’t wear. We’ll wait! The story of Elaine (Samantha Robinson) whips a 1960s-Technicolor fever dream out of self-delusion and the obsessive need to be adored. It’s all love potions and pastel perfection until someone gets ghosted, if you catch our drift.
- 36/45
KIKI
Want a famous witch with a work ethic? Kiki isn’t brooding over hexes at home; she’s out running an air-delivery business by broomstick at age 13. Like a hot cup of tea or a still-warm loaf from Osono’s bakery, Kiki’s Delivery Service is witchcraft with a heavy helping of coming-of-age coziness. It will make you want to quit your job to open a bakery.
- 37/45
WENDY THE GOOD LITTLE WITCH
If you need more proof that not all witches are wicked, Wendy of Casper Meets Wendy is a Grade-A example; goodness is literally in her name, after all! Played by a baby-faced Hilary Duff, she’s the world’s sweetest spellcaster and a witch who’d rather make friends than trouble. She also seriously made us want a red cape of our own.
- 38/45
AGATHA HARKNESS
It really was Agatha All Along, huh? Kathryn Hahn’s deliciously unhinged witch went from scene-stealing WandaVision side character to heading up her own series full of chaos, camp, and a theme song we’ll never escape. Not bad for someone who used to play the nosy neighbor in a cursed cul-de-sac!
- 39/45
MADAM MIM
Disney’s The Sword in the Stone gave us one of animation’s most chaotic spellcasters: Madame Mim. With her wild hair, manic energy, and love of “all things rotten,” she’s the perfect foil to Merlin and proof that sometimes — maybe even a lot of the time? — villains get to have more fun.
- 40/45
ALEX, JANE & SUKIE
Cher, Susan Sarandon, and Michelle Pfeiffer as bestie witches? What exactly did we do to deserve such a gift? Rewatching The Witches of Eastwick today, it’s hard not to feel the jolt of the movie switching between satire and earnest sexism, but hey, it’s the ‘80s. We’ll take it if it means getting to see this trio as witches, complete with hair teased to high heaven and a love interest from hell (Jack Nicholson).
- 41/45
JENNIFER
In I Married a Witch, Veronica Lake plays Jennifer, a 17th century witch out for revenge against the descendent of the man who burned her at the stake — only, she accidentally brews herself a love story instead. It’s an Old Hollywood spin on spooky and screwball, and it became a blueprint for pretty much every witchy rom-com after.
- 42/45
YUBABA & ZENIBA
Noticing a pattern of sisters — and, especially, of twins — on this list? Spirited Away’s twin witches couldn’t be more different. Corporate queen Yubaba runs a bathhouse full of spirits like a mob boss, while Zeniba dishes out tea and gentle guidance from a quiet home in the woods. Like many sisters who happen to be famous witches, they’re a classic study in duality and what it means to use power for very different ends.
- 43/45
ALEX RUSSO
Before there were TikTok witches, there was Alex Russo, the heroine of Wizards of Waverly Place. Equal parts rebellious teen and reluctant magical prodigy, she gave a whole generation of Gen Z viewers their first Disney-channel dose of witchcraft, making magic feel relatable with a roll of her eyes and a flick of her wand. She’s also the character who turned Selena Gomez into a household name, which is pretty powerful in and of itself.
- 44/45
SPLENDORA AGATHA “AGGIE” CROMWELL
We could’ve said Marnie Piper, but let’s be real: Grandma Aggie is the witch of Halloweentown as far as we’re concerned. Brought to life by Hollywood legend Debbie Reynolds, she’s equal parts mischief, wisdom, and twinkle-eyed charm. Basically, she’s the grandmother every witch (and non-witch) wishes they had.
- 45/45
THE THREE MOTHERS
Enough about witch sisters. Filmmaker Dario Argento gave us three witch mothers — Mater Suspiriorum (the Mother of Sighs), Mater Tenebrarum (the Mother of Darkness), and Mater Lachrymarum (the Mother of Tears) — in his legendary The Three Mothers trilogy. Made up of the movies Suspiria, Inferno, and Mother of Tears, each tells the story of a “Mother,” one third of an ancient trio of witches bent on unraveling reality. Think less magic tricks and more psychological possession, with plenty of red lighting and operatic horror to go around.












































