• A play produced by
J. Fred Zimmerman Sr. opened at the
New Amsterdam Theatre in 1906. • A 1919 opera by
Philip Napier Miles; Carnegie award 1921; performed in Bristol 1924; vocal score published by J. Curwen 1926. • The
radio drama anthology series,
The Weird Circle, adapted the story for broadcast on 20 May 1945. • An episode of the 1950s radio drama anthology
The Hall of Fantasy was adapted from "Markheim". • An episode of the 1950s radio drama
Dragnet titled "The Big In-Laws" quotes the story. • A 1953 episode of
Theatre Royal, a BBC radio series broadcast on NBC in the United States, with
Laurence Olivier as Markheim and
Abraham Sofaer as The Stranger. • It was dramatized as the third episode of the fifth season of the television series
Suspense in 1952. The episode was titled "All Hallow's [sic] Eve" and starred
Franchot Tone. • A 1954 short film The Mirror and Markheim, with
Philip Saville as Markheim and
Christopher Lee as The Visitant, or the Devil. • The story was dramatized for television as an episode of the anthology series ''
Screen Directors' Playhouse'' (1955–56);
Ray Milland starred as Markheim and
Rod Steiger portrayed the Stranger. • The story was dramatised for television as an episode of the series
Rendezvous in 1959.
Charles Gray was Markheim and
Anthony Dawson the Stranger. •
Carlisle Floyd adapted the story into a
one-act opera as a vehicle for
Norman Treigle; it was premiered in 1966 and published by
Boosey and Hawkes. • An adaptation by Tom Wright was broadcast on
BBC Radio 4 on 17 September 1971 with
Tom Watson as Markheim, Malcolm Hayes as The Stranger and Martin Heller as The Dealer; this production was subsequently re-broadcast on
BBC Radio 7 and
BBC Radio 4 Extra. • The story was dramatized for the TV Series
Theater Macabre (1971–72), hosted by
Christopher Lee. In this adaptation, both Markheim and the Visitor are portrayed by the same actor. • The story was dramatised for Scottish Television in 1974 with
Derek Jacobi as Markheim and
Julian Glover as the Stranger. • The radio anthology
CBS Radio Mystery Theater adapts Markheim in an episode first aired in 1975 with
Kevin McCarthy as Markheim. • An adaption for opera, with music by
Lyell Cresswell and libretto by
Ron Butlin, toured New Zealand in 2008. • In 2009, a reading of the story by
Hugh Bonneville was broadcast on
BBC Radio 7. • The Italian composer Carlo Deri composed a one-act opera,
Markheim, for which he created a libretto freely inspired by the story; it was premiered in 2015, transcribed from the original as a chamber opera (Pisa, Italy, Teatro Verdi, 18 April 2015). • The artist
Ken Currie produced an etching entitled 'Markheim' in 2015 and critics have referenced the story in relation to his art. ==References==