Stage adaptations include the successful
The Cricket on the Hearth by
Albert Richard Smith produced at the
Surrey Theatre in 1845, and
Dion Boucicault's
Dot, A Drama in Three Acts (or simply
Dot), first performed at New York's
Winter Garden in 1859. It was staged repeatedly in Britain and America for the remainder of the 19th century, starring, at times,
John Toole,
Henry Irving, and Jean Davenport. The play helped launch the career of American actor
Joseph Jefferson (1829–1905). The novella was the basis for at least two operas:
Karl Goldmark's
Das Heimchem am Herd with a libretto by
A. M. Willner (premiere: June 1896, Berlin; New York 1910), and
Riccardo Zandonai's
Il grillo del focolare with a libretto by Cesare Hanau (premiere: November 1908, Turin). Goldmark's opera was performed in
Philadelphia in November 1912 with the Cricket sung by American soprano
Mabel Riegelman (1889,
Cincinnati – 1967,
Burlingame, California). Film, radio, and television adaptations include three American
silent film versions:
one, directed by
D.W. Griffith (1909) starring
Owen Moore, another directed by L. Marston (1914) starring
Alan Hale, and
one directed by
Lorimer Johnston (1923). A silent Russian version,
Sverchok na Pechi (1915) was directed by Boris Sushkevich and Aleksandr Uralsky and starred
Maria Ouspenskaya. A silent French version,
Le Grillon du Foyer (1922), was directed and adapted by
Jean Manoussi and starred
Charles Boyer as Edouard. A 25-minute
NBC radio play adaptation aired on 24 December 1945. In 1967,
Rankin/Bass Productions produced a 50-minute animated television adaptation of the story for NBC. Told in the Cricket's own words, it featured the voices of
Roddy MacDowall as the Cricket, and father and daughter
Danny Thomas and
Marlo Thomas as Caleb and Bertha, with various other characters voiced by
Paul Frees and
Hans Conried. Television Corporation of Japan (now
Eiken) provided the animation for the special, while its seven original songs were written and composed by
Maury Laws and
Jules Bass. ==See also==