Bertolt Brecht adapted Shakespeare's play in 1952–55, as
Coriolan for the
Berliner Ensemble. He intended to make it a tragedy of the workers, not the individual, and introduce the
alienation effect; his journal notes showing that he found many of his own effects already in the text, he considered staging the play with only minimal changes. The adaptation was unfinished at Brecht's death in 1956; it was completed by Manfred Wekwerth and Joachim Tenschert and staged in
Frankfurt in 1962. In 1963, the BBC included Coriolanus in
The Spread of the Eagle. Slovak composer
Ján Cikker adapted the play into an opera which premiered in 1974 in
Prague. In 1983, the
BBC Television Shakespeare series produced a version of the play. It starred
Alan Howard and was directed by
Elijah Moshinsky. In 2003, the
Royal Shakespeare Company performed a new staging of
Coriolanus (along with two other plays) starring
Greg Hicks at the
University of Michigan. The director, David Farr, saw the play as depicting the modernisation of an ancient ritualised culture, and drew on
samurai influences to illustrate that view. He described it as "in essence, a modern production. The play is basically about the birth of democracy." In 2011,
Ralph Fiennes directed and starred as Coriolanus with
Gerard Butler as Aufidius and
Vanessa Redgrave as Volumnia in a modern-day film adaptation
Coriolanus. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray in May, 2012. It has a 93% rating on the film review site Rottentomatoes.com.
Slavoj Žižek argued that unlike preceding adaptations, Fiennes' film portrayed Coriolanus without trying to rationalise his behaviour, as a raw figure for the "radical
left" whom he compares to Che Guevara, whom Žižek characterises as making clear that "a revolutionary also has to be a 'killing machine'". In 2019, the
Tanghalang Pilipino staged a Filipino translation of the tragedy. It was translated by Guelan Varela-Luarca and was directed by Carlos Siguion-Reyna. The play was led by TP Actors Company's senior member Marco Viaña as Coriolanus, opposite to him is Brian Sy as Tullus Aufidius,
Frances Makil-Ignacio and Sherry Lara alternating the role of Volumnia. Along with them are Jonathan Tadioan as Menenius, JV Ibesate as Velutus, Doray Dayao as Brutus, and the Tanghalang Pilipino Actors Company.
Parody While the title character's name's pronunciation in
classical Latin has the
a pronounced "[aː]" in the
IPA, in English the a is usually pronounced "[eɪ]."
Ken Ludwig's
Moon Over Buffalo contains a joke dependent upon this pronunciation, and the parody
The Complete Wrks of Wllm Shkspr (Abridged) refers to it as "the
anus play". Shakespeare pronunciation guides list both pronunciations as acceptable.
Cole Porter's song "Brush Up Your Shakespeare" from the musical
Kiss Me, Kate includes the lines: "If she says your behaviour is heinous,/Kick her right in the Coriolanus". Based on
Coriolanus, and written in blank verse, "Complots of Mischief" is a satirical critique of those who dismiss conspiracy theories. Written by philosopher Charles Pigden, it was published in
Conspiracy Theories: The Philosophical Debate (Ashgate 2006). ==References==