Television In 1980, the third episode of the first series of the
ITV drama series
Lady Killers recreated the court case, with Ellis played by
Georgina Hale. In the series 1 conclusion of
Deadly Women Ellis was portrayed by Carissa Singleton, with Blakely played by Jimmy Aschner. In June 2023, ITV announced it would produce a standalone
adaptation of Ellis' story which would be based on true crime author
Carol Ann Lee's book
A Fine Day for Hanging: The Real Ruth Ellis Story, with Ellis being portrayed by
Lucy Boynton. The adaptation was originally titled simply as
Ruth, but was later retitled
A Cruel Love: The Ruth Ellis Story. The four-part series was aired from March 2025, also starring
Toby Jones as John Bickford,
Laurie Davidson as David Blakely,
Mark Stanley as Desmond Cussen and
Nigel Havers as Sir
Cecil Havers (his own grandfather). In the non-fictional sphere, the case was dramatised in the
Murder Maps series of documentaries on the Yesterday Channel on 2 November 2017. It was re-examined the following year by film-maker Gillian Pachter in the
BBC Four documentary series
The Ruth Ellis Files: A Very British Crime Story. The documentary suggested that Ellis may have suffered domestic abuse by Blakely, and that the gun used may have been supplied by Cussen, who may also have driven the taxi that took Ellis to the Magdala pub.
Books Carol Ann Lee's book A Fine Day for Hanging: The Real Ruth Ellis Story. The hanging of Ruth Ellis is part of a conversation between characters in
Broken Country by Claire Leslie Hall.
Film Diana Dors, who had starred in
Lady Godiva Rides Again, in which Ellis had a minor, uncredited role, played a character resembling (though not based on) Ellis in the 1956 British film
Yield to the Night, directed by
J. Lee Thompson. To date the only direct cinematic portrayal of Ellis has been the 1985 film
Dance with a Stranger, directed by
Mike Newell, and featuring
Miranda Richardson as Ellis. The scriptwriter was
Shelagh Delaney. The film
Pierrepoint (2006) includes Ellis as a supporting role, portrayed by
Mary Stockley. It was broadcast on
ITV on 25 August 2008, when it attracted an estimated audience of 3.6 million. The film was renamed
Pierrepoint: The Last Hangman for its North American release.
Stage Both Ellis's and Pierrepoint's stories are retold in the stage play
Follow Me, written by Ross Gurney-Randall and Dave Mounfield and directed by Guy Masterson. It premiered at the
Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh as part of the
2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The case was also the basis for
Amanda Whittington's play
The Thrill of Love. It premiered at the New Vic Theatre, Newcastle-under-Lyme, in February 2013 and subsequently played at St James Theatre London with Faye Castelow in the main role.
Maxine Peake played Ellis in an adaptation of Whittington's play, broadcast on 5 November 2016 by
BBC Radio 4. The story was also the inspiration for the 2015 opera
Entanglement by the composer
Charlotte Bray and
Sinners Club, a 2017 musical play by Lucy Rivers. A co-production with
Theatr Clwyd, the latter premiered at The Other Room Theatre in Cardiff, in February 2017. In 2023, actor Carly Halse wrote and performed
Now You See Me, a solo performance based on Ruth Ellis' story.
Now You See Me toured as part of the Hidden Stories double-bill presented by The Plays The Thing theatre company. In March 2025 Ruth - The Musical was produced by
Andy Morahan and performed at
Wilton's Music Hall and was described as a 'timely tale of a woman’s struggle in a patriarchal society, which resonates so deeply in the era of #MeToo'. ==References==