''. •
Philadelphia 76ers player
Andrew Toney was dubbed "the Boston Strangler" because of his outstanding performances against the
Boston Celtics; a notable example is Game 7 of the 1982 Eastern Conference Finals. • The 1964 film
The Strangler was inspired by the unsolved killings. •
William Goldman's 1964 novel
No Way to Treat a Lady and its
1968 film adaptation were both inspired by the multiple-killer theories of the Boston Strangler. • The
rock and roll band
The Standells referred to the Boston Strangler in their 1965 Boston-themed song "
Dirty Water" with the lines "have you heard about the Strangler?" and "I'm the man, I'm the man." • The 1968 film
The Boston Strangler starred
Tony Curtis as
Albert DeSalvo.
Henry Fonda co-starred. • The
Rolling Stones song
Midnight Rambler from their 1969 album
Let It Bleed was loosely based on the Boston Strangler. • The 1995 film
Copycat makes reference to the Boston Strangler. • The 2007 novel
The Strangler by William Landay depicts the family of an attorney on the Strangler task force. • The 2007 novel
Strangled by Brian McGrory depicts a Boston newspaper reporter receiving evidence and notes from potentially the same murderer, over 40 years later, and police efforts to suppress the idea that they did not solve the original case. • A 2008 film
The Boston Strangler – The Untold Story stars
David Faustino as De Salvo. • The 2010 television film
The Front, starring
Andie MacDowell and
Daniel Sunjata, depicts a detective who reopens an unsolved 1960s murder of a woman who may have been the first victim of the Boston Strangler. The plot suggests that DeSalvo was not the only perpetrator of these Boston murders. • The Boston Strangler made an appearance in the episode "Strangler" of
CBS's
American Gothic, where he was summoned by the antagonist sheriff Lucas Buck to get rid of Merlyn Temple. When Lucas leaves town to attend a convention, Albert De Salvo -aka The Boston Strangler- decides to do more than just try to kill Merlyn. • The Boston Strangler was featured as a central figure in the second episode of TNT's
Rizzoli & Isles, starring
Angie Harmon and
Sasha Alexander. The episode was called "Boston Strangler Redux", featuring a new serial killer who killed women with the same names as the original Strangler's victims. He is eventually revealed to have been one of the original detectives investigating the case who tried to frame the man whom he believed to be the real Boston Strangler. • He and the
Zodiac Killer are featured in
Image comics'
The Roberts. • A waxwork of Albert DeSalvo was featured in an episode of the British comedy series
Psychoville. The waxwork comes to life in a fantasy sequence (along with those of
John George Haigh,
John Christie, and
Jack the Ripper), trying to persuade character David Sowerbutts to kill a man by strangling. The others accused him of having several personalities, referencing the 1968 movie. • In the 13th episode of the second season of
Crossing Jordan titled "Strangled", the characters have a Cold Case party where they role play the investigation into two murders that fit the MO of the Boston Strangler. • A
Boston hardcore band is named the Boston Strangler. • The
Rolling Stones released "
Midnight Rambler" on the album
Let It Bleed in 1969. The song is a loose biography of Albert DeSalvo; the lyric "Well, you heard about the Boston..." followed by a menacing bass guitar chord, is a reference to the killer. • A 2016
podcast titled
Stranglers delves into the Boston Strangler investigation and features clips of the DeSalvo confession tapes and interviews with relatives of the key players in the investigation, including chief investigator Phil DiNatale's sons. •
Boston Strangler was a 2023 American film based on the real case, and starred
Keira Knightley,
Carrie Coon,
Alessandro Nivola,
Chris Cooper, and
David Dastmalchian. The film was shot in the Boston area, and was released in the United States on
Hulu in March of 2023. ==See also==