Over a period of decades, a number of attempts were made to make a film from the book, which was difficult given its lack of an actual plot. In 2002 the BBC began work on a three-part TV comedy series, which ultimately aired in November 2004 and is available as a DVD, starring Clare Thomas as Jessica White,
Martin Clunes as her father and
Mak Wilson as Fungus. This Gala Films production with screenplay by author
Mark Haddon, featuring live-action humans and animated Bogeys, was nominated for five awards. It tells of how Jessica, a human teenager, finds her way into Bogeydom and meets Fungus and his family. The family has an addition, a daughter named Mucus, and Fungus' son Mould (who featured in the original book) is a teenager going through a rebellious phase: cleaning things instead of dirtying them. A three-part adaptation, featuring
Timothy Spall as the title character, aired on
Sky1 in December 2015 and was partly shot at
West London Film Studios. This adaption also starred
Marc Warren,
Keeley Hawes,
Joanna Scanlan,
Jimmy Akingbola,
Paul Kaye, and also
Victoria Wood in her final television role before her death in April 2016. It was produced by
Andy Serkis's motion-capture studio,
The Imaginarium, with Serkis also as the narrator. A stage production, based on the book, was performed at
artsdepot in North London between November 2007 and August 2008. A co-production with
Pilot Theatre, the show was directed and adapted by
Marcus Romer and designed by Ali Allen. The book also inspired the song "
Bogey Music" by
Paul McCartney, which was released on
McCartney II. The liner notes state this inspiration, and also claims the song "is the first record made by 'dry cleaners' for the expanding Bogey market." ==TV series==