"My Old Kentucky Home" has appeared in many films, live action and animated, and in television episodes, in the 20th and 21st centuries. The original title for the first draft of
Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel
Gone with the Wind was "Tote The Weary Load", a lyric from "My Old Kentucky Home, Good-Night!"
Scarlett O’Hara and
Rhett Butler sing the song in Chapter 17, and the lyric "a few more days for to tote the weary load" appears in the text of the novel as Scarlett is returning to
Tara. In 1939, "My Old Kentucky Home" was featured in the film version of
Gone with the Wind both instrumentally and with lyrics. In the movie, Prissy, played by
Butterfly McQueen, sings the line, "a few more days for to tote the weary load".
Judy Garland sang "My Old Kentucky Home, Good-Night!" live on December 14, 1938, on the radio show,
America Calling. She later covered it again on
The All Time Flop Parade with Bing Crosby and
The Andrews Sisters. On April 29, 1953, Garland headlined a
Kentucky Derby week appearance in
Lexington, Kentucky, named "The Bluegrass Festival" where she sang the song "My Old Kentucky Home", accompanied by a single violin. In 1940, Bing Crosby sang "My Old Kentucky Home, Good-Night!" via radio broadcast with
Leopold Stokowski conducting a symphony for the dedication of the Stephen Foster postage stamp release held in Bardstown, Kentucky, at
My Old Kentucky Home. Kate Smith performed the song on March 20, 1969, on
The Dean Martin Show with
Mickey Rooney and
Barbara Eden. In 2009 the song was covered in
Mad Men, Season 3, Episode 3, "My Old Kentucky Home."
Roger Sterling (played by
John Slattery) performs the song in
blackface for his young bride at a Kentucky Derby party. In 2010 the song was covered in
The Simpsons, Season 21, Episode 13, "
The Color Yellow". Marge and Lisa read from the footnotes of a cookbook written by Mabel Simpson in which she describes the escape of a slave, Virgil, who is assisted by Eliza Simpson. Virgil and Eliza find safe harbor in a circus operated by Krusty the Clown, who hides them from slave patrollers by disguising them as circus acts. Krusty asks what talents Virgil possesses, to which he replies that he has music talent and then performs the song, "My Old Kentucky Home" while playing violin. The song also appears in the episode "
Rosebud", where a young
George Burns sings the song's first line.
Johnny Depp,
Lyle Lovett,
David Amram and
Warren Zevon covered the song "My Old Kentucky Home" at the tribute memorial of journalist
Hunter Thompson in December 1996. One of Thompson's most notable pieces, "
The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved", in addition to Thompson being a native of
Louisville, Kentucky, inspired the performers to cover the song for his tribute. The performance was recreated 9 years later in 2005 at midnight after Thompson's ashes were blasted from a cannon.
Don Henley stated in 2015 for the
Los Angeles Times that some of the music he wrote for the
Eagles was inspired by the music of
Stephen Foster. Henley states that, as a child, his grandmother sang songs such as "My Old Kentucky Home". "“My grandmother lived with us. She sat in a rocking chair every day, singing hymns and Stephen Foster songs: ‘My Old Kentucky Home,’ ‘Way Down Upon the Suwanee River’ and ‘The Old Folks At Home,’ and all those very American things. That's probably where I got ‘Desperado.’ If you listen to that melody and those chords ... Billy Joel said to me the minute he heard it, ‘That’s Stephen Foster! I said, ‘OK, fine!’" ==Lyrics by Stephen C. Foster==