The immense popularity of Maeterlinck's play probably originated the idiom in English. In 1934, this was strengthened by the popular American song "
Bluebird of Happiness". Written by
Sandor Harmati and
Edward Heyman, it was recorded several times by American tenor
Jan Peerce, for
RCA Victor and also by Art Mooney and His Orchestra. The bluebird is featured in the song "Be Like The Bluebird" in the popular musical
Anything Goes. The lyrics "
Somewhere, over the rainbow, bluebirds fly" in
Harold Arlen and
Yip Harburg's 1938 song for the 1939 film
The Wizard of Oz is a likely allusion to the idiom as well.
Shirley Temple starred in the 1940 American fantasy
The Blue Bird. In 1942, the popular song "
(There'll Be Bluebirds Over) The White Cliffs of Dover" used them, despite an absence of real blue birds on those cliffs, among other imagery to lift spirits. The Academy Award-winning song, "
Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah," from Walt Disney's 1946 live-action and animated film
Song of the South, makes reference to "Mr. Bluebird on my shoulder" as a symbol of good cheer. In the 1946 Japanese film
No Regrets for Our Youth, directed by
Akira Kurosawa, when Yukie and Noge reunite in Tokyo during the war, Yukie laments that she is not happy with her career and wants to do something truly meaningful in the struggle for freedom. Noge responds, "Who finds work like that even once in their lives? It's like finding The Blue Bird of Happiness." The bluebird is mentioned at the end of the 1968
Beatles film
Yellow Submarine, when the leader of the
Blue Meanies, the Chief Blue Meanie claims that his "cousin is the bluebird of happiness". Beatles
Paul McCartney wrote a song about them for his band
Wings’ 1973 album
Band on the Run, "
Bluebird". The
Velvet Underground song “Candy Says” contains a line pertaining to watching the blue birds fly as a metaphor for happiness passing by
Candy Darling, the song’s subject, while she is in the wrong body.
The Allman Brothers Band's 1972 song "
Blue Sky" has the lyric "Don't fly, mister blue bird, I'm just walking down the road". The bluebird occurs twice in songs written by Bob Dylan. "Up To Me", an outtake from
Blood On the Tracks, 1975, has the lyric: "Everything went from bad to worse, money never changed a thing / Death kept followin’, trackin’ us down, at least I heard your bluebird sing". The song "Congratulations" from
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1, 1988, has the lyric: "This morning I looked out my window and found / A bluebird singing, but there was no one around". A scene in the 1977 Disney film
The Rescuers uses the bluebird as a symbol of "faith ... you see from afar." In the 1985 film
Sesame Street Presents: Follow that Bird, the Sleaze Brothers kidnap
Big Bird and press him into service in their fun fair, where he is painted blue and billed as the Blue Bird of Happiness. In a play on the word "blue," Big Bird sings the mournful song "I'm So Blue." The lyrics of the
They Might Be Giants 1989 song "
Birdhouse in Your Soul" by
John Linnell includes the phrase "blue bird of friendliness." The 2001 film
K-PAX, directed by
Iain Softley, written by
Charles Leavitt and based on
the book of the same name by
Gene Brewer, contains a scene in which the lead character prot (played by
Kevin Spacey), claiming to be a visitor from outer space. He ends up in a psychiatric ward where he 'prescribes' a fellow patient with the task of finding a 'Bluebird Of Happiness'. In a later scene, the fellow patient excitedly yells out that he finally found the Bluebird, resulting in pandemonium amongst patients spanning several floors of the institution. The bluebird is also mentioned in
The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya episode "The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya Part III" in 2006. Musician
Neil Young has a song "Beautiful Bluebird" about a lost love on his 2007 album
Chrome Dreams II. "Blue Bird" is a song by
Hope Sandoval & the Warm Inventions from their 2009 album
Through the Devil Softly. A blue bird like device can be found in "The Bluebird of Zappiness" a 2010 episode of
Cyberchase. The main antagonist of the episode, which is Ledge now that Hacker has teamed up with the main protagonists to form a temporary alliance, dream is to discover the bluebird before Hacker does. They all want to find it, so they wake up at dawn, coincidentally because the episode is all about finding the length of your shadows. One the protagonists, Inez ultimately tries to beat Ledge to the device through a climbing race contest, but there ultimately a tie and the bluebird gets lost once again. The character Luna from the 2012 video game and visual novel ''
Zero Escape: Virtue's Last Reward'' wears a necklace with a caged bluebird, and the story is discussed in one ending. The titular bluebird of the song "Birds", from the 2013 album
Government Plates by the experimental hip hop group
Death Grips, is thought to be referencing
Charles Bukowski's poem "Bluebird". In Bukowski's poem, the bluebird can represent vulnerability in general, or the vulnerability that Bukowski felt as a result of
child abuse from his father. In the 2015 video game, “
Ensemble Stars!”, the character Tsumugi Aoba is commonly referred to as the bluebird of happiness, as a pun on his last name. The bluebird is also mentioned by
David Bowie in the song
"Lazarus" from his 2016 album
Blackstar. In the 2018 video game
Red Dead Redemption 2, during the scene where John Marston builds the ranch at Beecher's Hope, a bluebird is seen perched next to the gang while they are hammering and nailing the wood. As a parallel, main characters relationship-analogy fairy tale, and an identically named, diegetic wind ensemble piece in which the main characters must play a dialog, in the 2018 anime movie
Liz and the Blue Bird, a spinoff in the
Sound! Euphonium franchise. In a cartoon from
Gary Larson, the (absent) bluebird of happiness is mentioned as counterpart of the "chicken of depression". The character Meteion from the 2021
Final Fantasy XIV expansion pack
Final Fantasy XIV: Endwalker is a blue-colored harpy-esque familiar who can transform herself into a blue-colored bird and has the power to read emotions. In
Thatgamecompany's 2019 release
Sky: Children of the Light, the Season of the Blue Bird seasonal story update, that ran from April 21, 2025 to July 6, 2025, is based on the 1908 play
The Blue Bird by Belgian playwright and poet
Maurice Maeterlinck. In 2021
Toby Fox released Chapter 2 of the video game
Deltarune where after Berdly's second fight, Lancer says "The bluebird of crappiness. Fly high, bluebird. Fly high." ==Bluebirds in nature==