Film and television •
Mrs. ‘Arris Goes to Paris (1958) American TV episode (45–50 minutes) for the television series
Studio One starring British comedian
Gracie Fields. Currently not released for
home media. • '''' (1982) West German TV film starring
Inge Meysel; followed by five more TV films based on Paul Gallico's novels. •
Mrs. ‘Arris Goes to Paris (1992)
a TV movie starring
Angela Lansbury,
Diana Rigg, and
Omar Sharif. The film was produced by Lansbury's production company
Corymore Productions, and directed by Lansbury's son, Anthony Shaw. •
Gangoobai (2013) feature film starring
Sarita Joshi and
Raj Zutshi. A Maid-in-Matheran has lived a life with simple aspirations, until one day she finds a new purpose of buying a designer sari. She follows her dream to the big city of Mumbai. •
Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris (2022) feature film starring
Lesley Manville and
Isabelle Huppert.
Stage musical The musical-theatre adaptation
Flowers for Mrs Harris, with book by Rachel Wagstaff and music and lyrics by Richard Taylor, was produced by
Sheffield Theatres in May 2016, directed by
Daniel Evans, having been originally commissioned by Vicky Graham Productions. The production won three
UK Theatre Awards: Best Design (
Lez Brotherston), Best Performer in a Musical (
Clare Burt in the titular role), and Best Musical Production. The awards were presented at the UK Theatre Awards ceremony at London's
Guildhall in October 2016. A new production was mounted at Chichester Festival Theatre in September 2018, again directed by Daniel Evans, starring Clare Burt once more as Mrs Harris, alongside Joanna Riding as Lady Dant/Madam Colbert, Claire Machin as Violet Butterfield, and Gary Wilmot as the Major/Monsieur Armand. The production was streamed online to great acclaim in April 2020. The complete 2018 Chichester Festival Theatre cast and orchestra reassembled over 3 days in July 2020 to record the score. The recording took place on stage at the Festival Theatre, due to the restriction imposed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic making it impossible to record in a studio, whereas the Festival Theatre stage was large enough to accommodate full cast and band, sufficiently distanced. It was conducted by Tom Brady and recording engineer was Mike Walker. The recording was released in 2020. ==References==