German-Russian composer
Zinaida Petrovna Ziberova composed a musical setting for
The Misanthrope in 1934. Modern adaptations of the play have been written by
Tony Harrison and
Liz Lochhead. Lochhead's version is set in the early years of the revived Scottish Parliament and satirises
Scottish Labour's relationship with the media. Originally written in 1973, Harrison's version was updated and revived at the
Bristol Old Vic in 2010. A 1996 verse adaptation by
Martin Crimp for the
Young Vic updated the play to the "media-celebrity complex" of contemporary London.
Uma Thurman and
Roger Rees starred in a run of this version for
Classic Stage Company in New York in 1999 directed by Barry Edelstein. and it was revived by
Thea Sharrock at the Comedy Theatre, London starring
Damian Lewis and
Keira Knightley in December 2009.
Robert Cohen's 2006 translation into heroic couplets was praised by the
Los Angeles Times as "highly entertaining... with a contemporary flavor full of colloquial yet literate pungency." Professor Cohen's version has been popular in productions staged by his former students, and it is the version staged by
Keith Fowler in 2011 for
UC Irvine's celebration of Cohen's fifty years at the university.
The Grouch, a more modern verse version of
The Misanthrope by
Ranjit Bolt was first performed at
West Yorkshire Playhouse in February 2008. It is set in contemporary London, and most of the characters' names are recognisably linked to Molière's: in the sequence of the above cast list they are Alan, Celia, Phil, Eileen, Orville, Fay (Arsinoe), Lord Arne, Chris, and manservant Bates. Another adaptation by
Roger McGough was premiered by the
English Touring Theatre at the
Liverpool Playhouse in February 2013 prior to a national tour – this adaptation is largely in verse, but has Alceste speaking in prose. In June 2014, Andy Clark, Rosalind Sydney and Helen MacKay appeared in a three-handed 50-minute version of
The Misanthrope, written in rhyming couplets by Frances Poet, set and performed in the basement theatre of Glasgow's Òran Mór.
The Scotsman noted "the sheer, sharp-edged wit of Poet's rhyming text, which pays perfect homage to the original, while diving boldly into the new world of fall-outs and friendships conducted on social media."
The School for Lies by
David Ives (2011) was described by
The New York Times as a "freewheeling rewrite of
The Misanthrope".
Justin Fleming has translated and adapted
The Misanthrope in varied rhyme scheme with Alceste as a woman and Celimene as a young man for
Bell Shakespeare Company and
Griffin Theatre Company co-production in the
Sydney Opera House Playhouse Theatre 2018. ==Audio==