A Nazi adaptation of the play was
Hans Steinhoff's 1937 film
Ein Volksfeind. This classic play was adapted by
Arthur Miller in the 1950s in a production that opened at the
Broadhurst Theater on December 28, 1950. It starred Academy Award winner
Fredric March and his wife
Florence Eldridge as well as
Morris Carnovsky; future Oscar winner
Rod Steiger was a "townsperson." Miller's adaptation was presented on
National Educational Television in 1966, in a production starring
James Daly. It was also made into
a movie of the same name in 1978, starring
Steve McQueen. The
BBC then cast
Robert Urquhart as "Tom Stockman" in their 1980 TV version, adapting the story and the cast names to reflect it now being set in a
Scottish town. In the creation of his adaptation of Ibsen's work, several changes were made by Miller to make the play more accessible and accepting to a 1950s audience, as opposed to Ibsen's late 1800s audience. Many major edits not only included the transformation of speech and language, but changes were made to the character of Dr. Stockmann to avoid having him champion
eugenics. Throughout the play, Dr. Stockmann acts as a
Christ figure. Miller found it necessary therefore to change Ibsen's use of genetic and racial theories from the late 1800s to further Dr. Stockmann's standing as a champion of the lower classes as opposed to a scientist with a belief in racial determinism and the importance of eugenics for "improving" people. For example, in Ibsen's original, a portion of Dr. Stockmann's speech to the people contained: {{Blockquote|text=The masses are nothing but the raw material that must be fashioned into the people. Is it not so with all other living creatures on earth? How great the difference between a cultivated and an uncultivated breed of animals!... Don't you believe that the brain of a poodle has developed quite differently from that of a mongrel? Yes, you may depend upon that! It is educated poodles like this that jugglers train to perform the most extraordinary tricks. A common peasant-cur could never learn anything of the sort—not if he tried till Doomsday... we are animals... there is a terrible difference between men-poodles and men-mongrels. In Miller's adaptation, no such eugenics-positive screed is read. Miller keeps Dr. Stockmann's ideals as a character, and his dedication to facing down the hypocrisy of the aristocracy and governmental bureaucrats, but portrays him as more of a democratic thinker and socialist, while retaining some of the original character's ideas about the evolution of animals and humans, and the need to cultivate humane qualities in order to bring the masses to a more rational and educated level, so that they can fully participate in a democracy. In Miller's adaptation, part of the doctor's speech reads: A
version was produced for Australian television in 1958. The 1972 Greek film
O ehthros tou laou (An Enemy of the People) is an adaptation of the play, taking place in Greece during the mid-1930s. A BBC adaptation of EOTP was made in 1977 and aired in February 1980. Set in contemporary small-town Scotland, it can be found on BBC iplayer. The play was the indirect inspiration for the blockbuster movie
Jaws.
Satyajit Ray's 1989 film
Ganashatru was based on this play. In 1990, PBS produced the play for their show
American Playhouse, starring William Anton and
John Glover. In 2000 an adaptation of the play called
Paragon Springs written by
Steven Dietz premiered at Milwaukee Repertory theatre in Milwaukee Wisconsin, U.S.A. The play is set in "a small town in the American Midwest" in 1926.
An Enemy of the People (with the subtitle
The strongest one is the one who stands alone), a Norwegian film released in 2004 and directed by
Erik Skjoldbjærg, is an adaptation of Ibsen's play. In 2007
Ouriel Zohar's troupe Compagnie Ouriel Zohar performed an adaptation for two actors only of
An Enemy of the People, performed first in
Paris, then
Fréjus,
Besançon (2008),
Liège,
Minsk,
Valleyfield (Canada, 2009), and Porto Heli (
Greece, 2010). In early 2013, a stage adaptation entitled "عدو الشعب" (Arabic:
Enemy of the people or
A Public Enemy) was organized and directed by
Nora Amin (who played Doctor Stockmann's wife, with Tarek El-Dewiri as Doctor Stockmann) in
Cairo. It was translated into colloquial Arabic and featured a rock-themed soundtrack played live on-set. Jointly sponsored by the Norwegian Embassy in Cairo and the Ibsen Studies Center in Norway, it received various positive reviews at a time when Egypt was plunged into deep political turmoil. A new adaptation by
Robert Falls, based on a 19th-century translation by
Eleanor Marx, was staged at Chicago's
Goodman Theatre from March - April 2018. In Autumn 2021, a new
National Theatre of Scotland adaptation entitled simply
Enemy, authored by Keiran Hurley and directed by Finn den Hertog, toured Scotland. The play is set in a fictional Scottish town, is written using contemporary language and makes use of innovative technical effects such as overhead projected Twitter feeds, social media comments, and video live streams. In 2024 at
Duke of York's Theatre,
Thomas Ostermeier directed an adaptation he co-wrote with Florian Borchmeyer. It was first staged in 2012, but was translated from German to English by
Duncan Macmillan for the London performance. Starring
Matt Smith and
Jessica Brown Findlay, the adaptation converts the Act IV town meeting into an
audience participation event which allows contemporary issues to be aired. A new adaptation by
Amy Herzog on
Broadway at the
Circle in the Square Theatre previewed on February 27, 2024, with an opening night March 18. The production was directed by
Sam Gold and starred
Jeremy Strong,
Michael Imperioli, and
Victoria Pedretti. Strong won the
Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in a Play for his performance. ==Censored in Mainland China==