Drama •
Catherine the Great wrote two skits lampooning Cagliostro in the guise of characters loosely based upon him. •
Johann Wolfgang Goethe wrote a comedy based on Cagliostro's life, also in reference to the
Affair of the Diamond Necklace,
The Great Cophta (
Der Groß-Coptha) which was published in 1791. • Latvian playwright
Mārtiņš Zīverts wrote the play
Kaļostro Vilcē (Cagliostro in
Vilce) in 1967.
Literature •
Alexandre Dumas, père used Cagliostro in several of his novels (especially in
Joseph Balsamo and in
Le Collier de la Reine where he claims to be over 3,000 years old and to have known
Helen of Troy). •
George Sand includes Cagliostro as a minor character in her historical novel,
The Countess of Rudolstadt (1843). •
Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy wrote the supernatural love story
Count Cagliostro, in which the Count brings to life a long dead Russian princess by materializing her from her portrait. The story was made into a 1984 Soviet TV movie
Formula of Love. • Cagliostro is featured in three stories by
Rafael Sabatini, namely "The Lord of Time", "The Death Mask" and "The Alchemical Egg", which are included in Sabatini's collection
Turbulent Tales. • In "
The Sandman" by
ETA Hoffmann. Spalanzani is said to resemble a portrait of Cagliostro by Chodowiecki. • In "The Book and the Beast", a short story by
Robert Arthur, Jr., a
grimoire attributed to Cagliostro causes the gruesome death of those foolish enough to examine it, until a fire destroys it. • He is mentioned in the novel
Kun Lun by Kilburn Hall (2014), where it is revealed that Alessandro Cagliostro, Joseph and Giuseppe Balsamo are just a few of the names that the time traveler
Count St. Germain has used throughout history. •
Friedrich Schiller started, but not finish, the novel
Der Geisterseher (The Ghost-Seer) between 1786 and 1789, concerning him. •
Harry Stephen Keeler paid tribute to the magician in his novel
The Spectacles of Mr. Cagliostro. • He is a character in
Robert Anton Wilson's
The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles. • He is frequently mentioned
Umberto Eco's novel ''
Foucault's Pendulum''. •
Mikhail Kuzmin wrote a novella called
The Marvelous Life of Giuseppe Balsamo, Count Cagliostro (1916). • He is a character in
Psychoshop, a novel by
Alfred Bester and
Roger Zelazny. •
Josephine Balsamo, a descendant of Joseph Balsamo who calls herself Countess Cagliostro, appears in
Maurice Leblanc's
Arsene Lupin novels. • Cagliostro makes a number of appearances as a vampire in
Kim Newman's
Anno Dracula series of novels. • There are numerous references to Cagliostro in the detective novel
He Who Whispers by
John Dickson Carr (aka Carter Dickson), one of his Dr
Gideon Fell mysteries, published by
Hamish Hamilton (UK) & Harper (USA) in 1946. In this book, a French professor, Georges Antoine Rigaud, has written a history:
Life of Cagliostro. An attempted murder committed in
He Who Whispers is similar in technique to part of an initiation ceremony undergone by Cagliostro into the lodge of a secret society. Cagliostro Street appears as a location in Carr's 1935 novel
The Hollow Man (published in the US as
The Three Coffins). • He is a character in the 1997 novel 'Superstition' by David Ambrose. He is an acquaintance of the fictional Adam Wyatt. • He is often mentioned in the novel ''Napoleon's Pyramids'' by
William Dietrich in connection with Freemasons and ancient Egyptian artifacts. • In
Robert A. Heinlein's
Glory Road, Star uses "Balsamo" as an alias, and refers to Giuseppe as her uncle. •
William Bolitho Ryall's
Twelve Against The Gods has a section on Cagliostro.
Comics •
The Phantom comic book (based on a comic strip of the same name) featured Cagliostro as a character in the story "The Cagliostro Mystery" from 1988. written by Norman Worker and drawn by Carlos Cruz. • The third
Kid Eternity comic book, published in 1946, featured Cagliostro's risen spirit. • In the
DC Comics universe, Cagliostro is described as an
immortal (
JLA Annual 2), a descendant of
Leonardo da Vinci as well as an ancestor of
Zatara and
Zatanna (
Secret Origins 27). • In
Marvel Comics'
Tomb of Dracula and
Dracula Lives comic books, Cagliostro is a frequent enemy of Dracula. In
Iron Man #149, Cagliostro trains
Doctor Doom in sorcery. • The manga
Rozen Maiden gives Count Cagliostro as one of many aliases adopted by the legendary dollmaker Rozen. He was shown to be in prison whittling wood. • He is a character in
Todd McFarlane's comic book
Spawn. He was introduced to the series by writer
Neil Gaiman. Here, Cogliostro was once a spawn of Hell bound to his duty to the daemon
Malebolgia. Having freed himself of the curse through alchemy and sorcery, he is teaching Spawn to do the same throughout the series.
Video games • Cagliostro is the namesake of a playable character in the Japanese Mobile game
Granblue Fantasy. •
Payday 2 by Overkill and Starbreeze studios features Cagliostro's manuscript as a key story item and opens a deep mystery within the game involving secret societies, immortality and nephilims. • Cagliostro is a villain in the
Spiders video game
Steelrising. His penchant for magic and alternative medicine is referenced; for example, in one scene, he is shown practicing
hypnosis with a pendulum. • Cagliostro is featured in
Fate/Grand Order as a Pretender-class servant. • Cagliostro appears as an opponent in the card cheating game
Card Shark.
Music • He appears as a principal character in the 1794 opera
Le congrès des rois, a collaborative work of 12 composers. • The French composer
Victor Dourlen (1780–1864) composed the first act to
Cagliostro, ou Les illuminés which premiered on 27 November 1810. The second and third acts were composed by
Anton Reicha (1770–1836). • The Irish composer
William Michael Rooke (1794–1847) wrote an unperformed work
Cagliostro. •
Adolphe Adam wrote the
opéra comique Cagliostro which premiered on 10 February 1844. •
Albert Lortzing wrote in 1850 the libretto for a comic opera in three acts,
Cagliostro, but did not compose any music for it. •
Johann Strauß (Sohn) wrote the
operetta Cagliostro in Wien (Cagliostro in Vienna) in 1875. • The French composer
Claude Terrasse (1867–1923) wrote
Le Cagliostro which premiered in 1904. • The Polish composer
Jan Maklakiewicz (1899–1954) wrote the ballet in three scenes
Cagliostro w Warszawie which premiered in 1938. • The Romanian composer
Iancu Dumitrescu (1944–) wrote the 1975 work
Le miroir de Cagliostro for choir, flute and percussion. • The American composer
John Zorn (1953–) composed
Cagliostro for solo viola in 2015. The performer uses two bows in the right hand to play on all four strings at once throughout the work. • The opera
Cagliostro by the Italian composer
Ildebrando Pizzetti (1880–1968) was performed on
Italian radio in 1952 and at
La Scala on 24 January 1953. • The comic opera
Graf Cagliostro was written by
Mikael Tariverdiev in 1983.
Film • Cagliostro has been portrayed in film by: • Fryderyk Jarossy (
Kaliostro, 1918) •
Reinhold Schünzel (
The Count of Cagliostro, 1920) •
Hans Stüwe (
Cagliostro, 1929) •
Ferdinand Marian (
Münchhausen, 1943) •
Orson Welles (
Black Magic, 1949) •
Howard Vernon (
Erotic Rites of Frankenstein, 1972) •
Jean Marais ('''', 1973, TV miniseries) •
Bekim Fehmiu (
Cagliostro, 1975) •
Nodar Mgaloblishvili (
Formula of Love, 1984, TV film) •
Nicol Williamson (
Spawn, 1997) •
Christopher Walken (
The Affair of the Necklace, 2001) •
Robert Englund (
The Return of Cagliostro, 2003) • In the 1943 German epic
Münchhausen, Cagliostro appears as a powerful, morally ambiguous magician portrayed by
Ferdinand Marian. • The French film director
Georges Méliès (1861–1938) directed the 1899 film
Le Miroir de Cagliostro.{{cite web • The Japanese animated movie
The Castle of Cagliostro draws on
Maurice Leblanc's
Arsène Lupin novels and has the gentleman thief's half-Japanese grandson as the protagonist. Lazare d'Cagliostro appears as the main antagonist of the film, a ruler of a fictional country who influences the world's economy through counterfeiting (inspired by the 1977 story
The Justice of Arsène Lupin). •
The Mummy (1932), starring
Boris Karloff, was adapted from an original story treatment by
Nina Wilcox Putnam titled "Cagliostro". Based on Cagliostro and set in San Francisco, the story was about a 3000-year-old magician who survives by injecting nitrates. • Cagliostro and his wife, Lorenza, appear as antagonists in the 2006 anime ''
Le Chevalier d'Eon''. While Cagliostro is mostly portrayed as a bumbling money-grubber, Lorenza is shown to have arcane magic powers. • In the
Marvel Cinematic Universe, Cagliostro is a sorcerer, and is mentioned often in
Doctor Strange (2016). The
Book of Cagliostro: Study of Time is an ancient artifact containing several dark spells. The spin-off Disney+ series
What If...? mentions him as one who could break an absolute point in time.
Doctor Strange read the lost books of Cagliostro and reversed an absolute point in time, much like the books' author.
Television • He is a whimsical villainous alchemist character in the TV anime
Senki Zesshou Symphogear AXZ. • He appears as a villainous magician in an episode of the 1960s series
Thriller, entitled "The Prisoner in the Mirror"; he is played by
Henry Daniell and
Lloyd Bochner. • In "Diana's Disappearing Act", a 1978 episode of the
Wonder Woman TV series, a descendant of Cagliostro's (played by
Dick Gautier) is the villain. Attempting alchemy, he succeeds to the extent of turning lead into gold for a time, after which it reverts back to its original form. The long-lived Wonder Woman says that she faced his ancestor, the original count, in the past. • A magician named Cagliostro is murdered in "Death Casts a Spell," a 1984 episode of
Murder She Wrote. • In
Samurai Jack (the seventh episode of the third season), the title character follows a quest for the crystal of Cagliostro. This episode contains an homage to
The Castle of Cagliostro by way of Jack receiving aid from a thief based directly on
Daisuke Jigen. • The 2016
Lupin III yearly special featured a hunt for the treasure of Cagliostro. Prior to this, the name was also used for the 1979 Lupin III theatrical release
The Castle of Cagliostro, though with little relation to the historical Cagliostro. • In
The Twilight Zone (2002 TV series), Episode 36 "The Pharaoh's Curse", an up-and-coming illusionist strives to learn the secrets behind a centuries-old illusion, which has been purportedly handed down from magician masters
Harry Houdini, Frederick Eugene Powell, and back originally to Cagliostro himself. ==Notes==