• 1909:
Sao Krua Fah (), a Thai adaptation of
Madama Butterfly written by Prince
Narathip Praphanphong. The play is set in
Chiang Mai and centers on a romance between a
Northern Thai dancer and a soldier from Bangkok. Further adaptations of
Sao Krua Fah have since been made, such as a
16 mm film in 1965 starring
Mitr Chaibancha and Pisamai Wilaisak. • 1915:
A silent film version was directed by
Sidney Olcott and starred
Mary Pickford. • 1919: A silent (tinted) film version (titled
Harakiri) directed by
Fritz Lang and starring Paul Biensfeldt, Lil Dagover, Georg John and Niels Prien. • 1922: A silent color film,
The Toll of the Sea, based on the opera/play was released. This movie, which starred
Anna May Wong in her first leading role, moved the storyline to China. It was the second
two-color Technicolor motion picture ever released and the first film made using Technicolor Process 2. • 1931:
Concise Chōchō-san by the
Takarazuka Revue • 1932:
Madame Butterfly, a non-singing drama (with ample portions of Puccini's score in the musical underscoring) made by
Paramount starring
Sylvia Sidney and
Cary Grant in black & white. • 1940: "
Madame Butterfly's Illusion", a 12-minute Japanese
silhouette animation film. • 1954:
Madame Butterfly, a screen adaptation of the opera, directed by
Carmine Gallone jointly produced by Italy's
Cineriz and Japan's
Toho. The film was shot in Technicolor at
Cinecittà in Rome, Italy. Starring Japanese actress
Kaoru Yachigusa as Cio-Cio San and Italian tenor
Nicola Filacuridi as Pinkerton, and with Japanese actors and Italian actors, dubbed by Italian opera singers. • 1974:
Madama Butterfly, a German television adaptation of the opera starring
Mirella Freni and
Plácido Domingo, directed by
Jean-Pierre Ponnelle and conducted by
Herbert von Karajan. • 1984: "Madam Butterfly (Un bel dì vedremo)" is a song by
Malcolm McLaren, an
electronic interpretation of the aria "
Un bel dì vedremo" from
Madama Butterfly. It was released as a
single from McLaren's 1984 album
Fans, and reached number 13 on the
UK Singles Chart and No. 19 on the
US Dance Singles Chart. • 1988: The play
M. Butterfly by
David Henry Hwang is partially based on
Madama Butterfly as well as the story of French diplomat
Bernard Boursicot and the Beijing opera singer
Shi Pei Pu. • 1989:
Miss Saigon, a musical by
Claude-Michel Schönberg and
Alain Boublil, is inspired by the opera, focusing on a doomed romance between an American
Marine and a Vietnamese
bargirl and transporting the action to the end and aftermath of the
Vietnam War. • 1995:
Frédéric Mitterrand directed a film version of the opera,
Madame Butterfly, in
Tunisia, North Africa, starring
Richard Troxell and Chinese singer
Ying Huang in the lead roles. • 1995: Australian choreographer
Stanton Welch created a ballet, inspired by the opera, for
The Australian Ballet. • 1996: The album
Pinkerton by the rock band
Weezer is based loosely on the opera. • 2004: On the 100th anniversary of
Madama Butterfly,
Shigeaki Saegusa composed
Jr. Butterfly to a libretto by
Masahiko Shimada. • 2011: '''' is a Japanese novel, and TV drama series based on the novel, written by . Based on the original opera, the story depicts the sorrowful love and turbulent life of a
samurai's daughter who loses her parents at a young age and becomes the apprentice of a
geisha, set in the early
Meiji era in
Nagasaki, Japan. It stars Japanese actress
Aoi Miyazaki as Cho Ito (Cho cho san). • 2013:
Cho Cho, musical drama by
Daniel Keene, music by Cheng Jin, set in 1930s Shanghai. • 2021:
Mariposa, an operatic dance-drama set in post-revolution Cuba where a local rent boy and a foreign sailor fall in love. ==References==