Adaptations • The
York Playhouse produced a one-act opera,
Bartleby, composed by
William Flanagan and
James J. Hinton Jr. with a libretto by
Edward Albee, from January 1 to February 28, 1961. • The first filmed adaptation was by the
Encyclopædia Britannica Educational Corporation in 1969. It was adapted, produced, and directed by
Larry Yust and starred
James Westerfield and Patrick Campbell, with
Barry Williams of
The Brady Bunch fame in a small role. The story has been adapted for film four other times as
Bartleby: • in
1970, starring
Paul Scofield; • in
1976, in France, by
Maurice Ronet, starring
Michel Lonsdale; • in 1977, by Israel Horovitz and Michael B Styer for Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting, starring Nicholas Kepros, which was an entry in the 1978 Peabody Awards competition for television; • and in
2001, by Jonathan Parker, starring
Crispin Glover and
David Paymer. • The first BBC Radio 4 adaptation dramatised by Martyn Wade, directed by Cherry Cookson, and broadcast in 2004 stars Adrian Scarborough as Bartleby,
Ian Holm as the Lawyer, David Collings as Turkey, and Jonathan Keeble as Nippers. • Another BBC radio 4 production was a reading of the story by
Alex Jennings, broadcast in 2025. • In 2009, French author
Daniel Pennac read the story on the stage of La Pépinière-Théâtre in Paris. • The story was adapted for the stage in 2020 by
Juhan Ulfsak for
Von Krahl Theatre in
Estonia as
Pigem ei (literal translation: "
Rather not").
References to the story Literature •
Arthur C. Clarke references the character of Bartleby in his 1983 novel
2010: Odyssey Two, comparing the computer HAL to "Melville's autistic scrivener". •
Bartleby: La formula della creazione (1993) by
Giorgio Agamben and
Bartleby, ou la formule by
Gilles Deleuze are two philosophical essays reconsidering many of Melville's ideas. • The story features prominently in
Stephen King's 1998 novel
Bag of Bones. The final line of the book references Bartleby's phrase "I prefer not to". •
Bartleby & Co. (2000), novel by
Enrique Vila-Matas is named after and prominently references the character. •
Abdulrazak Gurnah references "Bartleby, the Scrivener" throughout his 2001 novel
By the Sea. The protagonist, Saleh Omar, quotes Bartleby's mantra to explain his decision to abstain from speaking English on seeking asylum in the UK. •
Jeff Smith's comic-book series
Bone features a "rat creature" named Bartleby who declines to partake in the violence and savagery of his feral brethren. The Melville connection is reinforced by the fact that
Moby-Dick is the series protagonist's favorite novel.
Film and television In addition to the direct film adaptations listed above: •
Head of the Class Season Four, Episode 20, "The Quiet Kid" (February 28, 1990) introduces the character Jasper Kwong (
Ke Huy Quan), who keeps saying "I would prefer not to" when asked to join the academic team. Eventually, Mr. Moore (
Howard Hesseman) confronts him, knowing that he's quoting "Bartleby, the Scriverner." Eventually it comes out that Jasper had challenged another kid to a rooftop
chess game, and the kid jumped off the roof after losing, and rumors had spread that Jasper had killed a guy, so he had changed schools multiple times to escape the rumor. * In 2011, French director
Jérémie Carboni made the documentary
Bartleby en coulisses around Daniel Pennac's reading of "Bartleby, the Scrivener". Additionally, the writer of a series of diaries in the episode is named Bartleby. • The quote "I would prefer not to" is used multiple times in
The Bride! (2026) and the characters discuss the quote, its origins and meaning during a meal.
Other • Lively Arts Records released ''
James Mason Reads Herman Melville's Bartleby The Scrivener'' (LA 30007) on LP in 1960; this recording was also released on LP by Listening Library, Inc. (AA 3331) • The electronic text archive
bartleby.com is named "after the humble character of its namesake scrivener, or copyist—publishes the classics of literature, nonfiction, and reference free of charge." • The British newspaper magazine
The Economist maintains a column named "Bartleby" focused on managers trying to understand how to motivate their employees and to empathize with employees who "carry out their bosses' often-bewildering orders, even when they would 'prefer not to'." • The
92nd Street Y presented a livestreamed and on-demand reading of the story by actor
Paul Giamatti in November 2020. A December 3, 2020, conversation between Giamatti and Andrew Delbanco is archived on YouTube. •
Horris Records released the track [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oCnu6qDo-rw
Bartleby, the Scrivener, performed by
MC Lars and
Mega Ran, on June 7, 2019. ==See also==