Literature adaptations •
Gold Spun, a 2021 first novel of a duology by Brandie June. •
Gilded, a 2021 first novel of a duology by
Marissa Meyer •
Spinning Silver, a 2018 fantasy novel by
Naomi Novik Film •
Rumpelstiltskin (1915 film), an American silent film, directed by
Raymond B. West •
Rumpelstiltskin (1940 film), a German fantasy film, directed by Alf Zengerling •
Rumpelstiltskin (1955 film), a German fantasy film, directed by Herbert B. Fredersdorf •
Rumpelstiltskin (1985 film), a twenty-four-minute animated feature •
Rumpelstiltskin (1987 film), an American-Israeli film •
Rumpelstiltskin (1995 film), an American horror film, loosely based on the Grimm fairy tale •
Rumpelstilzchen (2009 film), a German TV adaptation starring
Gottfried John and
Julie Engelbrecht Ensemble media • The 1973 Turkish superhero film
3 Dev Adam features Rumpelstiltskin in a cameo appearance as a voyeuristic puppet in a bedroom intercourse scene involving
Spider-Man with his girlfriend and sidekick Nadya. Appearing alongside him in the scene are two other voyeuristic puppets that are
King Friday XIII and Constable Bobby. This film features several unauthorized characters including
Captain America and
El Santo. • Adapted into the 1987-1989 anime series ''
Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics'', the miller's daughter's name is Gretchen (Helga in the Japanese version). • The 1994 direct-to-video
Muppet Classic Theater adapted the story, starring
The Great Gonzo as the title character,
Miss Piggy as the miller's daughter, and
Kermit The Frog as the king. In this version of the story, Rumpelstiltskin reveals that his mother sent him to camp every summer until he was 18. The miller's daughter, who has her father, the king and the king's loyal royal advisor help her guess the name of the "weird, little man", recalls that "a good mother always sews her kid's name inside their clothes before sending them off to camp." Thus, the girl decides to check his clothing, and finds Rumpelstiltskin's name inside. • "Rumpelstiltskin", a 1995 episode from
Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child. • In the 1999 animated series
Simsala Grimm, the miller's daughter's name is Sissi, the king's name became Friedrich Ferdinand, and the count's name is Sir Randolph. This version swapped the first two givings, first, the ring; then, the necklace of Sissi's dear departed mother. Upon the help of Yoyo and Doc Croc, King Friedrich Ferdinand realizes Sir Randolph's plan and banishes him from the castle, banning his return, before marrying Sissi. Rumpelstiltskin gives Yoyo and Doc Croc a few hours to reach Sissi before the end of the third day. • ''Barney's Once Upon a Time'' involves the story told by Stella, with Shawn as the title character, Tosha as the miller's daughter, Carlos as the King, and Barney as the messenger. • Rumpelstiltskin appears as a figment of Chief O'Brien's imagination in the 15th episode "
If Wishes Were Horses" of season 1 in the
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. •
Rumpelstiltskin appears as a villainous character in the
Shrek franchise, first voiced by
Conrad Vernon in a minor role in
Shrek the Third. In
Shrek Forever After, the character's appearance and persona are significantly altered to become the main antagonist of the film, now voiced by
Walt Dohrn. • In
Once Upon a Time,
Rumplestiltskin is one of the integral characters, portrayed by
Robert Carlyle. Within the interconnected fairy tale narrative, he acts as a composite character for the Crocodile from
Peter Pan, the Beast of
Beauty and the Beast and
Cinderella's fairy godfather. The creators rewrote his character into the Dark One, an immortal and virtually almighty sorcerer and the kingmaker of the whole plot, who spins straw into gold as a hobby and is obsessed with contracts and agreements of any sort, always based on the refrain that "all magic comes with a price". • Rumpelstiltskin appears in
Ever After High as an infamous professor known for making students spin straw into gold as a form of extra credit and detention. He deliberately gives his students bad grades in such a way they are forced to ask for extra credit. • The cast of the children's TV series
Rainbow acted out the story in a 1987 episode. Zippy played the title character,
Geoffrey played the king,
Rod played the miller, Bungle played the miller's daughter, George played the baby,
Jane played the maid, and
Freddy played a peasant. • The video game
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door has a similar format with the character of Doopliss inspired by Rumpelstiltskin, in which the player has to guess his name correctly, but can only do so by finding the "p" in a chest underground. This reference is more direct in the original Japanese version and other translations, in which the character is named "Rumpel". • In a
Courage the Cowardly Dog episode "Rumpledkiltskin", a Scottish man lures Courage and Muriel to his castle by posing as Muriel's great uncle and forces her to make 5,000 kilts so he can profit them. In order to escape, Courage arranges a game of charades with him to guess his real name to earn their freedom, to which Courage won. Admitting his defeat and feeling humiliated by his name, Muriel suggest he should change his name to "Rumpelstiltskin", which he happily accepts and offers her to be business partners. • In ''
Happily N'Ever After'', Rumpelstiltskin successfully steals the miller's daughter baby and assist
Cinderella's evil stepmother Frieda after she tampers with the Scales of Good and Evil. He appears again in the
sequel where he helps
Lady Vain to ruin
Snow White's reputation by giving her an apple that makes her publicly say bad things to everyone in her kingdom.
Theater •
Utz-li-Gutz-li, a 1965 Israeli stage musical written by
Avraham Shlonsky •
Rumpelstiltskin, a 2011 American stage musical == Notes ==