Literature •
Hannah Flagg Gould's (1789-1865) poem "The Frost" features a mischievous being responsible for the quieter phenomena of winter, beautiful ice paintings on windows but who also got upset at lack of gifts and caused the cold to break and ruin things. • In Margaret T. Canby's "Birdie and His Fairy Friends" (1874), there is a short story titled "The Frost Fairies." In this story, Jack Frost is the king of the
Winter Spirits and is described as a kind fellow who wants to help children, whereas a king of a neighboring kingdom, King Winter, is cruel to them. The story tells the origins of how Jack Frost began to oversee the coloring of the leaves of the forest in fall. • In 1891
Helen Keller made her own reproduction of the story, titled
The Frost King. • In
Charles Sangster's "Little Jack Frost", published in The Aldine, (Vol.7, No.16, 1875) Jack Frost is a playful being who runs around playing pranks and 'nose-biting', coating places with snow before being chased off by Dame Nature for spring. • In
L. Frank Baum's
The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus (1902), Jack Frost is the son of the otherwise unnamed Frost King. He takes pleasure in nipping "scores of noses and ears and toes", but Santa Claus, who likes Jack (who he sees as a "jolly rogue") though he mistrusts him, asks him to spare the children. Jack says he will, if he can resist the temptation. The same Jack appears in "The Runaway Shadows", a short story by Baum. In this story, he has the power to freeze shadows, separating them from their owners, making them their own living entities. • In
Laurell K. Hamilton's
Meredith Gentry series, a character emerges as the original Jack Frost. • Jack Frost has appeared as a minor character in the
Rupert Bear stories. • In the
Rainbow Magic books by Daisy Meadows, Jack Frost is an antagonist who causes trouble in Fairyland. He is accompanied by pesky goblins who steal the fairies' important objects, and try to sabotage them. • Jack Frost also appears in "
First Death in Nova Scotia", a poem by
Elizabeth Bishop. • In the novel
Hogfather by
Terry Pratchett, Jack grows tired of "fern patterns" and paints more elaborate pictures on windows. • Jack Frost appears in
The Veil trilogy of novels by
Christopher Golden. • The Man Jack, an enigmatic assassin, calls himself Jack Frost in
The Graveyard Book by
Neil Gaiman. •
The Stranger, a picture book by
Chris Van Allsburg, stars Jack Frost as a lonely stranger with
amnesia. • In Amy Wilson's
The Lost Frost Girl, Jack Frost’s daughter Owl discovers powers she’s inherited from Jack and ventures into the world of the
fae.
Comics • Jack Frost appears in Windsor McCay's comic strip
Little Nemo in Slumberland, first being mentioned in a strip published in 1906 and then appearing in another strip published the subsequent year. •
John T. McCutcheon's painting of "Jack Frost" first appeared in the
Chicago Tribune front page on September 24, 1922. Jack is depicted painting individual leaves, and lamenting that people will admire his work and then rake the leaves into piles and burn them. • In comic books,
Jack Frost appears as a superhero in works published by
Timely Comics (
Marvel Comics) in the 1940s. •
Marvel Comics had a second Jack Frost, the first alias of the original
Blizzard. •
Jack Frost is the alias of Dane McGowan one of the main characters from the 1990s Vertigo series
The Invisibles. • In
Jack of Fables (a
Fables spinoff) the titular character became Jack Frost for a period of time. A second Jack Frost ("Jack too, or Jack two") appears as the son of Jack Horner and The Snow Queen. • In
DC Comics, Jack Frost is a descendant of the
frost giants, the personification of winter, and former lover of the Asgardian hero
Siegfried.
Films •
Jack Frost, a Russian film from 1964, has the title
Morozko—the Russian equivalent of Jack Frost. • In the 1997 film
Jack Frost,
Scott MacDonald plays a serial killer turned into a snowman who continues his rampage. This movie spawned a sequel in 2000:
Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman. • In the 1998 film
Jack Frost,
Michael Keaton plays a human turned into a snowman by the name of Jack Frost. • Jack Frost appears as the primary antagonist in
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause played by
Martin Short. • Jack Frost appears as the main protagonist of
Rise of the Guardians, loosely based on the series
Guardians of Childhood by
William Joyce, voiced by
Chris Pine.
Radio, animation, and television • The title character in
Ub Iwerks's 1934 animated short
Jack Frost in the
ComiColor Cartoons series. • The title character (voiced by
Robert Morse) in
Rankin/Bass's 1979 film
Jack Frost. • The character (voiced by
Paul Frees) also makes appearances in the Christmas television special ''
Frosty's Winter Wonderland and in Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July''. == See also ==