In 1933 the play was made into a film,
Loyalties, adapted by W P Lipscomb, directed by
Basil Dean and
Thorold Dickinson and starring
Basil Rathbone as Ferdinand de Levis,
Miles Mander as Captain Ronald Dancy, Algernon West as Charles Winsor, Cecily Byrne as Lady Adela Winsor,
Alan Napier as General Canynge,
Heather Thatcher as Margaret Orme,
Joan Wyndham as Mabel Dancy,
Athole Stewart as Lord St. Erth,
Philip Strange as Major Colford,
Robert Mawdesley as Graviter,
Lawrence Hanray as Jacob Twisden,
Ben Field as Gilman, and
Anthony Holles as Ricardos.
BBC Sunday-Night Play staged the play for BBC One in April 1962, with
Peter Wyngarde as Ferdinand de Levis,
Keith Michell as Dancy, Jennifer Wright as Mabel Dancy,
Felix Aylmer as Canynge, David Garth as Graviter,
Jack Watling as Winsor,
Austin Trevor as St Erth,
Oliver Johnston as Twisden, Diana Hope as Lady Adela, and Geoffrey Denys as Treisure. The play was broadcast on BBC Radio's
Saturday Night Theatre in 1967, adapted for radio by Peggy Wells and produced by Betty Davis, with
Keith Michell as Captain Ronald Dancy,
John Justin as Ferdinand de Levis, Rolf Lefebvre as Charles Winsor, Diana Olsson as Lady Adela Winsor, Wilfred Babbage as Treisure, Robert Sansom as General Canynge, Margaret Ward as Margaret Orme, Hilda Schroder as Mabel Dancy,
Stephen Thorne as Inspector Dede,
Frederick Treves as Augustus Borring, Geoffrey Wincott as Lord St Erth, Alexander John as Major Colford, Frank Henderson as Graviter, Howieson Culff as Jacob Twisden, Ronald Herdman as Gilman,
Harold Kasket as Ricardos, and Gordon Gardner as Robert. In 1976,
BBC Television broadcast a version as part of their
Play of the Month series, directed by
Rudolph Cartier and produced by
Cedric Messina. It starred
Edward Fox as Captain Ronald Dancy,
Charles Kay as Ferdinand de Levis,
John Carson as Charles Winsor,
Dinah Sheridan as Lady Adela Winsor,
Erik Chitty as Treisure,
Robert Flemyng as General Canynge,
Polly Adams as Margaret Orme,
Catherine Schell as Mabel Dancy,
Roger Hammond as Inspector Dede,
Jeremy Clyde as Augustus Borring,
Peter Dyneley as Lord St. Erth, Tom Criddle as Major Colford,
Geoffrey Palmer as Graviter,
David Markham as Jacob Twisden,
Frank Middlemass as Gilman, and
Steve Plytas as Ricardos. In a review of a revival of the play at the
Finborough Theatre in London in 2006,
Guardian theatre critic
Michael Billington wrote that "With consummate skill, Galsworthy shows how English caste and race loyalties diabolicially intersect" and that "Galsworthy's shockingly neglected plays are eminently revivable social documents". He reported that he saw the play with a packed house "who seemed, like me, to relish Galsworthy's portrait of the poisonous worm inside the woodwork of English society." ==References==