In stage productions •
The String of Pearls (1847), a melodrama by
George Dibdin Pitt that opened at Hoxton's Britannia Theatre and billed as "founded on fact". It was something of a success, and the story spread by word of mouth and acquired legendary characteristics. Various versions of the tale were staples of the British theatre for the rest of the century. The play was produced on Broadway during 1924 at the
Frazee Theatre, featuring Robert Vivian as Sweeney Todd and
Rafaela Ottiano as Mrs. Lovett. •
Sweeney Todd, the Barber of Fleet Street: or the String of Pearls (c. 1865), a dramatic adaptation written by Frederick Hazleton which premiered at the Old Bower Saloon, Stangate Street,
Lambeth. Birmingham. '' at the
Wharf Theater, June 2018|alt= •
Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1973), a play by the British playwright
Christopher Bond. This version of the story was the first to give Todd a slightly more sympathetic motive: he is Benjamin Barker, a barber convicted wrongfully who after 15 years in an Australian
penal colony escapes and returns to London using the new name Sweeney Todd, only to find that
Judge Turpin, who is responsible for his conviction, has raped his young wife Lucy and adopted Todd's daughter Johanna. He at first plans to kill Turpin, but when his prey escapes, he swears vengeance on humanity in general and begins to slash his customers' throats. He goes into business with
Mrs. Lovett, his former landlady, who bakes his victims' flesh into pies. At the end of the play, he finally gets his revenge by killing Turpin, but then unknowingly kills his own wife, who Mrs. Lovett had misled him into believing had died. After learning the truth, he kills Mrs. Lovett, but is in turn killed by Mrs. Lovett's assistant and surrogate son
Tobias Ragg, who slits Todd's throat with his own razor. •
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1979), is a musical adaptation of Bond's play by
Stephen Sondheim and
Hugh Wheeler. The show began on
Broadway in 1979 and in
London's West End in 1980. The show won multiple awards including the
Tony Award for Best Musical and the
Laurence Olivier Award for Best New Musical. There have since been several revivals in the West End, on Broadway and elsewhere. •
Empanada Loca (2015), a one-woman off-Broadway production written and directed by Aaron Mark for the
LAByrinth Theater Company.
Dance •
Sweeney Todd (1959), a ballet version performed by
the Royal Ballet with music by
Malcolm Arnold and choreography by
John Cranko.
Movies •
Sweeney Todd (1926), the first movie version of the story, a 15-minute British silent movie featuring G.A. Baughan in the title role, directed by George Dewhurst. The movie is now
lost. •
Sweeney Todd (1928), a British silent movie featuring
Moore Marriott as Sweeney Todd and Iris Darbyshire as Amelia Lovett. This is the earliest surviving movie adaptation. •
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1936), a movie version of the 19th-century melodrama featuring
Tod Slaughter as Sweeney Todd and Stella Rho as Mrs. "Lovatt". •
Bloodthirsty Butchers (1970), a horror movie with John Miranda as Sweeney Todd and Jane Helay as Maggie Lovett, directed by
Andy Milligan. •
Mystery and Imagination Episode: "Sweeney Todd" (1970), a TV Movie directed by Reginald Collin, adapted for television by Vincent Tilsley and Brian Brooke. Starring
Freddie Jones as Sweeney Todd,
Peter Sallis as Brogden, Mundel and Hopkins,
Russell Hunter as Crumbles, Dr. Fogg and Dr. Makepeace,
Lewis Fiander as Mark Ingestrie,
Heather Canning as Nelly Lovett and Molly,
Mel Martin as Charley and Charlotte,
Len Jones as Tobias,
Barry Stanton as Beadle and
Charles Morgan as Inspector Field. •
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007), a movie directed by
Tim Burton, adapted from Sondheim's musical. It features
Johnny Depp as Sweeney Todd,
Helena Bonham Carter as Mrs. Lovett,
Alan Rickman as Judge Turpin,
Jamie Campbell Bower as Anthony, and
Ed Sanders as Toby. The movie received two
Golden Globe Awards – one for Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical (Johnny Depp), and one for Best Picture, Comedy or Musical. The movie was also nominated for three
Academy Awards, winning for Art Direction.
Music • "Sweeney Todd, The Barber", a song which assumes its audience knows the stage version and claims that such a character existed in real life.
Stanley Holloway, who recorded it in 1956, attributed it to
R. P. Weston, a songwriter active from 1906 to 1934. • "Sweeney Todd" by
Brotha Lynch Hung, a song about a modern-day murderer who takes the character's name and
modus operandi. •
TODD. Act 1. Feast of Blood (TODD. Акт 1. Праздник крови 2011) and
TODD. Act 2. At the Edge (TODD. Акт 2. На краю 2012), two albums by
Korol' i Shut, a horror punk band from
Saint Petersburg. • "Demon Sweeney Todd," a song by British heavy metal band
Saxon on their 2009 studio album
Into the Labyrinth. • "Floyd The Barber," a song by
grunge band
Nirvana on their 1989 album
Bleach, features a scenario in which
Floyd Lawson, the barber from
The Andy Griffith Show, becomes a murderer styled after Sweeney Todd. •
Sweeney Todd was a Canadian rock music band of the late 1970s featuring
Nick Gilder, and later
Bryan Adams on lead vocals. • "Bleeders", a song from American hard rock band
Black Veil Brides is about the titular character and has a music video with lead singer
Andy Biersack portraying the character.
Radio and audio plays • In 1932,
Tod Slaughter recorded on
Regal Zonophone Records an abridged version of the Sweeney Todd story based on his famous stage performance; this version was re-released during 2013 digitally along with a similarly abridged recorded version for Regal Zonophone of his stage performance in
Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn. • "The Strange Case of the Demon Barber" (January 8, 1946), an adaptation of the Sweeney Todd story featured in an episode of the radio drama
The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. In this interpretation, an actor playing the character on stage begins to believe he is committing similar murders while sleepwalking, while
Sherlock Holmes and
Dr. Watson uncover evidence that may prove his sanity. • In 1947, the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's
CBC Stage Series broadcast a radio adaptation by
Ronald Hambleton of the George Dibdin Pitt play featuring
Mavor Moore as Todd,
Jane Mallett as Mrs. Lovett,
John Drainie as Tobias,
Lloyd Bochner as Mark Ingestrie,
Bernard Braden as Jarvis Williams,
Lister Sinclair as The Guide and Arden Kaye as Johanna Oakley. The production was directed by Andrew Allan, with original music composed by
Lucio Agostini. • In 1994, the 1993 National Theatre production was adapted and recorded for radio and broadcast on
BBC Radio 2 with
Denis Quilley as Todd and
Julia McKenzie as Mrs. Lovett. • The second episode of the BBC Radio comedy series
1835, entitled "Haircut, Sir?" (broadcast in 2004) portrayed aristocrat Viscount Belport and his servant Ned (
Jason Done) joining Sir Robert Peel's police force and encountering demon barber Sweeney Todd on their first case. •
Sweeney Todd and the String of Pearls: An Audio Melodrama in Three Despicable Acts (2007), an audio play by
Yuri Rasovsky, won three 2008
Audie Awards for best audio drama, best original work, and achievement in production. • In March 2021,
BBC Radio 4 broadcast
Sweeney Todd and the String of Pearls, a two-part adaptation by Archie Scottney of the
Prest novel/serial, directed by
Rosalind Ayres and with
Martin Jarvis as Sweeney Todd,
Joanne Whalley as Mrs. Lovett,
Rufus Sewell as Colonel Jeffries,
Moira Quirk as Joanna and
Ian Ogilvy as Major Bounce.
Television • "Sweeney Todd" (1970), an episode of the
ITV series
Mystery and Imagination featuring
Freddie Jones as Sweeney Todd and
Heather Canning as Nellie Lovett. In this adaptation, written by Vincent Tilsey and directed by Reginald Collin, the title character is portrayed as insane rather than evil. Lewis Fiander played Mark Ingesterie with
Mel Martin as the heroine Charlotte and Len Jones as Tobias. •
Sweeney Todd (1973), an hour-long TV production by the
CBC Television series
The Purple Playhouse with
Barry Morse as Todd. This was again Pitt's version of the play. •
Teeny Todd: The Demon Barber of Quarter Street was a musical comedy skit performed on
The Two Ronnies with
Ronnie Corbett as the pint-sized half-brother of Sweeney Todd and
Ronnie Barker as Mrs. Lovett. They revive the arrangement that Lovett had with Todd, and nearly get away with it until some clumsiness on Teeny's part reveals to a room full of police the chute down to the kitchen. •
The Tale of Sweeney Todd (1998), directed by
John Schlesinger, a made-for-television version first broadcast by the
Showtime network, featuring
Ben Kingsley as Sweeney Todd,
Joanna Lumley as Mrs. Lovett, and
Campbell Scott as Ben Carlyle, a police inspector; commissioned by
British Sky Broadcasting for which
Ben Kingsley received a
Screen Actors Guild Best Actor nomination for his portrayal of the title role. •
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street in Concert (2001), a filmed concert version of Sondheim's musical, featuring
George Hearn as Sweeney Todd/Benjamin Barker,
Patti LuPone as Mrs. Lovett,
Timothy Nolen as Judge Turpin, and
Neil Patrick Harris as Tobias. A new version of this production was broadcast in September 2014, this time with
Bryn Terfel as Todd,
Emma Thompson as Mrs. Lovett, and
Philip Quast as Judge Turpin. •
Sweeney Todd (2006), a
BBC television drama version with a screenplay written by Joshua St Johnston and featuring
Ray Winstone in the title role and
Essie Davis as Mrs. Lovett. In this version, set in the 18th rather than 19th century, Todd's murderous ways are the result of physical (possibly sexual) cruelty and assault while imprisoned as a child in
Newgate Gaol for a crime committed by his father who had escaped; at the movie's conclusion, while in a cell in Newgate and shaving himself on the morning of his execution, he deliberately slashes his own throat rather than be hanged. • "Oh My, Meat Pie" (2008), an episode of the
Cooking Channel series
Good Eats, which inserts the inventor of
shepherd's pie into the world of
Sweeney Todd in a historical recounting of the original recipe of the dish. • "
Andy's Play" (2010), the 129th episode of
The Office series, with Andy Bernard (
Ed Helms) singing and acting in a production of
Sweeney Todd. It was broadcast originally by
NBC on October 7, 2010. • "
The Horror of Dolores Roach" (2023), a television adaptation of the 2015 one-woman off-Broadway production "Empanada Loca." The off-Broadway show and the television adaptation are both inspired by the legend of Sweeney Todd, focusing on the titular character of Dolores going down a similar path.
In comics • The character of Sweeney Todd is presented as a villain in
Marc Andreyko's
Manhunter series, wherein he appears as a ghost which
possesses men (causing them to resemble him) and murders women. A supporting character,
Obsidian, is shown to be a fan of Sondheim's musical. •
Neil Gaiman and
Michael Zulli were to have created a Sweeney Todd adaptation for Taboo, published by Steve Bissette and Tundra, but only completed a prologue. •
Classical Comics, a UK publisher creating graphic novel adaptations of classical literature, has produced a full colour, 176-page paperback,
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2010), with script adaptation by Sean M. Wilson, linework by Declan Shalvey; colouring by Jason Cardy & Kat Nicholson, and lettering by Jim Campbell.
In rhyming slang In
rhyming slang, Sweeney Todd is the
Flying Squad (a branch of the UK's Metropolitan Police), which inspired the television series
The Sweeney. ==References==