Film adaptation The book was adapted into a stop-motion animated film by director
Wes Anderson. It was released in 2009 and features the voices of
George Clooney as Mr Fox,
Meryl Streep as Mrs Fox,
Bill Murray as Badger, Robert Hurlstone as Boggis, Hugo Guinness as Bunce and
Michael Gambon as Bean. The film's plot focuses more on Mr Fox's relationship with Mrs Fox and his son, which is pitted against Mr Fox's desire to steal chickens as a means of feeling like his natural self. The film adds scenes before Mr Fox attacks the three farmers and after they bulldozed the hill, as well as a slightly altered ending and more background on Mr Fox's past life as a thief of food. The Foxes' four children are replaced by Ash (voiced by
Jason Schwartzman), a small and insecure fox who seeks his father's approval and Mrs. Fox's nephew Kristofferson (voiced by
Eric Chase Anderson), who excels in athletics and is a source of jealousy for Ash.
Stage adaptations The book was adapted into a play of the same name by
David Wood and was first performed at the
Belgrade Theatre, Coventry in 2001. The play is licensed (in the U.K. only) through Casarotto Ramsay Ltd. for repertory performances and Samuel French Ltd. for amateur performances. A
musical adaptation of the book ran at the
Nuffield Theatre, Southampton during Christmas 2016 before touring the UK in early 2017.
Opera Tobias Picker adapted the book into an
opera which had its world premiere at the
Los Angeles Opera performing 9–22 December in 1998. The opera starred
Gerald Finley as Mr Fox and
Suzanna Guzman as Mrs Fox. A specially commissioned new version of this opera by
Opera Holland Park was performed in the gardens and natural scenery of
Holland Park in the summer of 2010 staged by
Stephen Barlow. This version starred
Grant Doyle as Mr. Fox, Olivia Ray as Mrs. Fox, Henry Grant Kerswell, Peter Kent and John Lofthouse as Farmers Boggis, Bunce and Bean. In 2019,
Fantastic Mr. Fox was recorded by the
Boston Modern Orchestra Project and
Odyssey Opera who were subsequently awarded the
Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording. ==References==