Paul Osborne was chosen to turn
Picnic into a musical in the 1960s. It was called
Hot September, and instead of going to the Alvin Theatre on Broadway in October 1965, the musical premiered in Boston and closed within a few weeks. Another rewrite of
Picnic, undertaken by Inge in the early 1970s, was titled
Summer Brave. It opened at the Equity Library Theatre in New York in 1973, two months before Inge committed suicide. The play lasted 14 performances, and it was revived two years later at the ANTA Theatre for 18 performances.
Picnic was made into a
film by Columbia Pictures and was released in December 1955. It was directed by
Joshua Logan, Another TV film was made in 2000, with
Gretchen Mol,
Josh Brolin,
Chad Morgan,
Bonnie Bedelia,
Mary Steenburgen. The University of Kansas' operatic version of the play premiered April 8, 2008. Librettist and stage director
Tim Ocel recalled "When Forrest Pierce knocked on my door during the fall of 2006 and said he’d like to compose something for KU Opera, I jumped at the chance. The voice/opera division was just beginning to consider what our contribution to the 50th Murphy Hall celebration would be. I thought maybe we should create something; William Inge is the playwright and dramatic storyteller of 1950s Kansas, so why not explore the possibility of turning one of his plays into an opera? We both agreed that
Picnic was the play that lent itself best to an operatic treatment. The libretto formed over the next six months, and by June 2007 Forrest was composing. The opera is a domestic comedy of sorts. Inge calls the play "A Summer Romance." It's about everyday people...you and I...who have to figure out what it means to be alive and connected and useful in this world. It attempts to show the truth and the possibility of our everyday lives." Inge's
Picnic was used as the basis for an opera with the name, composed by
Libby Larsen on a commission from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro's
School of Music, Theatre and Dance. Larsen's
Picnic premiered on Thursday, April 2, 2009 by UNCG, in Aycock Auditorium.
At Home with Amy Sedaris season 3, Episode 3, titled "Outdoor Entertaining" is loosely based on this play. In
The Golden Girls season 2, Episode 14, "The Actor", the women are cast in a similar play. ==References==