Theatre As early as 1905, several abortive attempts were made to put
Little Nemo on stage. In summer 1907,
Marcus Klaw and
A. L. Erlanger announced they would put on an extravagant
Little Nemo show for an unprecedented $100,000, with a score by
Victor Herbert and lyrics by
Harry B. Smith. It starred Gabriel Weigel, an actor with dwarfism, as Nemo,
Joseph Cawthorn as Dr. Pill, and
Billy B. Van as Flip. Reviews were positive, and it played to sold-out houses in New York. It went on the road for two seasons. McCay brought his vaudeville act to each city where
Little Nemo played. When a
Keith circuit refused to let McCay perform in Boston without a new act, McCay switched to the
William Morris circuit, with a $100-a-week raise. In several cities, McCay brought his son, who sat on a small throne dressed as Nemo as publicity. As part of an improvised story, Cawthorn introduced a mythical creature he called a "
Whiffenpoof". The word stuck with the public, and became the name of a
hit song and a
singing group. One reviewer of the 1908 operetta gave a paragraph of praise to the comic hunting tales presented in a scene in which three hunters are trying to outdo each other with hunting stories about the "montimanjack", the "peninsula", and the "whiffenpoof". He calls it "one of the funniest yarns ever spun" and compares it favorably to
Lewis Carroll's
The Hunting of the Snark. One source indicates that the dialogue in fact began as an
ad lib by actor
Joseph Cawthorn, covering for some kind of backstage problem during a performance. The whiffenpoof is also referred in one of the Little Nemo
comic strips published in 1909 (April 11). After being held down by nine policemen during a hysteria crisis, Nemo's father tells the doctor: "Just keep those whiffenpoofs away. Will you?".
The strip for September 26 starts with a hunt for whiffenpoofs but instead the hunters find a "montemaniac" and a "peninsula". Despite the show's success, it failed to make back its investment due to its enormous expenses, and came to an end in December 1910. In mid-2012 Toronto-based theatre company Frolick performed an adaptation of the strip into
Adventures in Slumberland, a multimedia show featuring puppets large and small and a score that included as a refrain "Wake Up Little Nemo", set to the tune of
The Everly Brothers' 1957 hit "
Wake Up Little Susie".
Talespinner Children's Theatre in
Cleveland, OH produced a scaled-down, "colorful and high-energy 45-minute" adaptation in 2013,
Adventures In Slumberland by
David Hansen. In March 2017, a short, one-act adaptation of the "Little Nemo" adventures was staged at Fordham University in New York City. The play, simply entitled
Little Nemo in Slumberland, was written by Aladdin Lee Grant Rutledge Collar, and directed by student Peter McNally. The six person cast, as well as creative team, consisted of students and alums at the university.
Film Animation McCay played an important role in the early history of animation. In 1911, he completed his first film,
Winsor McCay, the Famous Cartoonist of the N.Y. Herald and His Moving Comics (also known as
Little Nemo), first in theatres and then as part of his vaudeville act. McCay made the 4,000
rice-paper drawings for the animated portion of the film. The animated portion took up about four minutes of the film's total length. Photography was done at the
Vitagraph Studios under the supervision of animation pioneer
James Stuart Blackton. During the live-action portion of the film, McCay bets his colleagues he can make his drawings move. He wins the bet by animating his
Little Nemo characters, who shapeshift and transform. A joint American-Japanese feature-length film
Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland was released in Japan in 1989 and in the United States in August 1992 from
Hemdale Film Corporation, with contributions by
Ray Bradbury,
Chris Columbus, and
Moebius, and music by the
Sherman Brothers. The story tells of a quest by Nemo and friends to rescue King Morpheus from the Nightmare King. The Princess is named Princess Camille, Flip has a bird companion named Flap, and Nemo has a pet flying squirrel named Icarus. It received mixed reviews from critics, where it earned $11.4 million on a $35 million budget and was a
box-office bomb, but it sold well on home video and has since developed into a
cult film.
Live-Action In 1984, Arnaud Sélignac produced and directed a Live-Action film titled
Nemo, a.k.a.
Dream One, starring
Jason Connery,
Harvey Keitel, and
Carole Bouquet. It involves a little boy called Nemo, who wears pajamas and travels to a fantasy world, but otherwise the connection to McCay's strip is a loose one. The fantasy world is a dark and dismal beach, and Nemo encounters characters from other works of fiction rather than those from the original strip. Instead of Flip or the Princess, Nemo meets
Zorro,
Alice, and
Jules Verne's
Nautilus (which was led by
Captain Nemo). A live-action film adaptation,
Slumberland, directed by
Francis Lawrence, was released in 2022. It features a gender-swapped version of the title character played by Marlow Barkley.
Jason Momoa stars as a radically altered version of Flip, who is described as a "nine-foot tall creature that is half-man, half-beast, has shaggy fur and long curved tusks". The plot centers on Nemo and Flip traveling to Slumberland in search of the former's father.
Opera The
Sarasota Opera commissioned composer
Daron Hagen and librettist
J. D. McClatchy to create an opera based on
Little Nemo. Two casts of children alternated performances when it debuted in November 2012. The dreamlike nonlinear story told of Nemo, the Princess, and their comrades trying to prevent the Emperor of Sol and the Guardian of Dawn from bringing daylight to Slumberland. Special effects and shifting backgrounds were produced with projections onto a scaffolding of boxes. The work was first performed on November 10 and 11, by members of the Sarasota Opera, Sarasota Youth Opera, Sarasota Prep Chorus, The Sailor Circus and students from Booker High school.
Video games In 1990,
Capcom produced a video game for the
NES, titled
Little Nemo: The Dream Master (known as
Pajama Hero Nemo in Japan), a licensed game based on the 1989 film. The film would not see a US release until 1992, two years after the game's Japanese release, so the game is often thought to be a standalone adaptation of
Little Nemo, not related to the film. An
arcade game called simply
Nemo was also released in 1990. In 2021, a new game, titled
Little Nemo and the Nightmare Fiends based on the original comic strip was launched on Kickstarter. It is developed by Chris Totten of Pie For Breakfast Studios and Benjamin Cole of PXLPLZ. In 2022, a new game, titled
Little Nemo and the Guardians of Slumberland based on the original comic strip was launched on Kickstarter. It is developed by Dave Mauro of DIE SOFT.
Other media Throughout the years, various pieces of Little Nemo merchandise have been produced. In 1941, Rand, McNally & Co. published a Little Nemo children's storybook.
Little Nemo in Slumberland in 3-D was released by
Blackthorne Publishing in 1987; this reprinted Little Nemo issues with
3-D glasses. A set of 30 Little Nemo postcards was available through Stewart Tabori & Chang in 1996. In 1993, as promotion for the 1989 animated film, Hemdale produced a Collector's Set which includes a VHS movie, illustrated storybook, and cassette soundtrack. In 2001,
Dark Horse Comics released a Little Nemo statue and tin lunchbox. == Cultural influence ==