and
Joseph Haworth in a 1904 stage production of
Resurrection that toured the United States. Operatic adaptations of the novel include
Risurrezione (1904) by Italian composer
Franco Alfano,
Vzkriesenie (1960) by Slovak composer
Ján Cikker, and
Resurrection by American composer
Tod Machover. In late 1940–early 1941,
Dmitri Shostakovich worked on an operatic realization entitled
Katyusha Maslova, adapted by
Anatoly Mariengof, but never developed it beyond sketches. French composer
Albert Roussel's 1903 tone poem
Résurrection is inspired by the novel. Additionally, various film adaptations have been made, including the Russian film
Katyusha Maslova by director
Pyotr Chardynin (1915, the first film role of
Natalya Lisenko); a 1937 Japanese film by
Kenji Mizoguchi,
The Straits of Love and Hate (愛怨峡,
Aien kyō); the 1944 Italian film
Resurrection; a 1949 Chinese film version entitled "蕩婦心" (
A Forgotten Woman) starring
Bai Guang; and a 1960
Russian film, directed by
Mikhail Shveitser with
Yevgeny Matveyev, Tamara Semina and Pavel Massalsky. The best-known film version, however, is
Samuel Goldwyn's 1934 English-language film
We Live Again, starring
Fredric March and
Anna Sten, and directed by
Rouben Mamoulian. The Spanish director Alberto Gonzalez Vergel released his TV film
Resureccion in 1966. The 1968
BBC mini-series
Resurrection was rebroadcast in the US on
Masterpiece Theatre. The Italian directors
Paolo and Vittorio Taviani released their TV film
Resurrezione in 2001. An Indian-Bengali film adaptation titled "জীবন জিজ্ঞাসা" (
Jibon Jiggasha) was released in 1971, directed by Piyush Bose and starring
Uttam Kumar and Supriya Chowdhury. The 1973 Indian movie
Barkha Bahar was also based on this novel. Japan's all-female musical theater group
Takarazuka Revue adopted the novel into musical twice. First in 1962 as "カチューシャ物語" (Katyusha's Story), performed by Star Troupe starring Yachiyo Kasugano; and in 2012 as "復活 -恋が終わり、愛が残った-" (Resurrection – Love Remains After the Affair Ends) performed by Flower Troupe starring
Tomu Ranju. The plot Takarazuka Revue adapted follows more closely to
We Live Again than the book. The novel was
adapted for Australian radio in 1947 with an award winning performance by
Peter Finch in the lead.
BBC Radio 4 broadcast a two-part adaptation by Robert Forrest of the novel on 31 December 2006 and 7 January 2007, with the cast including
Katherine Igoe as Katerina,
Richard Dillane as Prince Dmitri,
Vivienne Dixon as Lydia and Joanna Tope as Vera. ==In popular culture==