The story has been adapted into puppet play, opera, dramatic play, and pantomime.
Puppet play There is an early record of puppet performance of the legend, dating to
Samuel Pepys's diary of 21 September 1668, which reads: "To Southwark Fair, very dirty, and there saw the puppet show of Whittington, which was pretty to see". At
Covent Garden, performances of "Whittington and his Cat" were put on by the puppeteer
Martin Powell (fl. 1710–1729). Powell was a successful showman, providing such a draw that the parish church of St. Paul would be drained of its congregation during hours of prayer when his plays were on. An advertisement bill of the puppet show has been copied out in
Groans of Great Britain, once credited to
Daniel Defoe but since reattributed to
Charles Gildon (d. 1724), with a description of some of the many extraneously added characters and elements: At Punch's Theater in the Little Piazza, Covent-Garden, this present Evening will be performed an Entertainment, called,
The History of Sir Richard Whittington, shewing his Rise from a Scullion to be Lord-Mayor of London, with the Comical Humours of Old Madge, the jolly Chamber-maid, and the Representation of the Sea, and the Court of Great Britain, concluding with the Court of Aldermen, and
Whittington Lord-Mayor, honoured with the Presence of
K. Hen. VIII. and his Queen
Anna Bullen, with other diverting Decorations proper to the Play, beginning at 6 o' clock. The puppet play
Whittington and his Cat was reviewed by an anonymous correspondent in
The Spectator, No. 14, dated 16 March 1711, soon after it opened.) objected that the rodents once released will not be thoroughly collected. Later
Whittington and his Cat, an opera written by Samuel Davey, was performed at the
Theatre in Smock Alley, Dublin, 1739.
Whittington, with music by
Jacques Offenbach and English text by
H. B. Farnie was first produced at the
Alhambra Theatre over Christmas 1874–75, and in 1895 the
comic opera Dandy Dick Whittington written by
George Robert Sims and composed by
Ivan Caryll played at the
Avenue Theatre.
Pantomime The first recorded pantomime version of the story was in 1814, starring
Joseph Grimaldi as Dame Cicely Suet, the Cook.
Ella Shields (Camden Theatre, 1907),
Sybil Arundale (
Theatre Royal, Birmingham, 1908),
Helen Gilliland (
Lyceum, 1925) are among the actresses who have played the
principal boy. Cast in other productions are listed below, including the production
Dick Whittington, which was the
2018 winner of the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Entertainment and Family. Dick's cat has been given the names Thomas, Tommy, Tommy Tittlemouse (1890), or Mouser (1908). and so forth. The pantomime has introduced an arch villain, King Rat (or the King of Rats), as well as the usual pantomime fairy, the Fairy of the Bells, personifying the London bells. An early record of King Rat and fairy occurs in an 1877 production at
Surrey Theatre. This production pitches the archvillain King Rat against the
Fairy Queen, for whom the fairy
Beau Bell serves as messenger. "King Rataplan (Rat-a-plan)" occurs even earlier, alongside "Queen Olivebranch" who assigns
Cupid to uplift Dick Whittington from poverty, in a
Charles Millward script for the Theatre Royal, Birmingham production of 1870. In some versions, Dick and his cat Tommy travel to Morocco, where the cat rids the country of rats. The Sultan rewards Dick with half of his wealth. The pantomime version remains popular today. Other notable pantomime productions included an 1877 version at the
Surrey Theatre described below, as well as the following: • 1872 on
Broadway, with music by William H. Brinkworth. • 1877 at the Surrey Theatre in London, entitled
Dick Whittington and His Cat; Or, Harlequin Beau Bell, Gog and Magog, and the Rats of Rat Castle, by Frank Green, with music by Sidney Davis, opening 24 December 1877. With comedian
Arthur Williams, Topsy Venn was Dick, and David Abrahams as the cat. The
Harlequinade also featured Tom Lovell as Clown. • 1891 by Geoffrey Thorne, with music by William H. Brinkworth at the Grand Theatre, with
Lottie Collins. • 1894 at the
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, with a libretto by
Cecil Raleigh and
Henry Hamilton. The cast included
Ada Blanche as Dick,
Dan Leno as Jack the idle apprentice,
Herbert Campbell as Eliza the cook and Marie Montrose as Alice. • 1908 at the
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, with a libretto by
J. Hickory Wood and Arthur Collins and music composed and arranged by Arthur Collins. The cast included
Queenie Leighton as Dick,
Wilkie Bard as Jack Idle, Marie Wilson as Alice and
George Ali as Mouser, the cat. • 1909, starring
Tom Foy,
Lupino Lane and
Eric Campbell at the Shakespeare Theatre,
Liverpool. • 1910 at the King's Theatre
Hammersmith, with a libretto by Leslie Morton. The cast included Kathleen Gray as Dick, Adela Crispin as Alice, Jack Hurst as the cat, Percy Cahill as Jack,
Robb Wilton as Alderman Fitzwarren and
Wee Georgie Wood as Alice's brother. • 1923 at the
London Palladium. The cast included
Clarice Mayne as Dick, Hilda Glyder as Alice, Fred Whittaker as the cat, and Nellie Wallace and Harry Weldon as the villains. • 1931 at the
Garrick Theatre. The cast included
Dorothy Dickson as Dick, Jean Adrienne as Alice, Roy Barbour as Alderman Fitzwarren, Hal Bryan as Idle Jack, Harry Gilmore as the cat and Jack Morrison as Susan the cook. • 1932 at the
London Hippodrome. The cast included
Fay Compton as Dick, Audrey Pointing as Alice, Fred Wynne as Alderman Fitzwarren, Johnny Fuller as the cat,
Leslie Henson as Idle Jack. • 1935 at the
Lyceum Theatre.
Other adaptations Dramatic play versions were written by
H. J. Byron in 1861,Listing of H. J. Byron's works
Robert Reece in 1871. A number of television versions have been created, including a
2002 version written by
Simon Nye and directed by
Geoff Posner. ==Relics==