• The hero of
Rafael Sabatini's historical novel
Scaramouche, and its film adaptations, is a similar
swashbuckling character who goes incognito in the theatrical role of Scaramouche. • Several films were named Scaramouche, among other past films and TV series, include: •
Scaramouche (1912-13) Op. 71, is a two-act tragic ballet-pantomime, comprising 21 numbers, written by the Finnish composer
Jean Sibelius. •
Scaramouche (1923), silent movie by
Rex Ingram •
Scaramouche (1952), directed by
George Sidney with
Stewart Granger,
Janet Leigh,
Eleanor Parker, and
Mel Ferrer. •
The Adventures of Scaramouche (1963), a French-Italian-Spanish feature film, directed by
Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi, starring
Gérard Barray,
Michèle Girardon, and
Gianna Maria Canale. •
The Loves and Times of Scaramouche (1976), an Italian comedy film, directed by
Enzo G. Castellari, starring
Michael Sarrazin,
Ursula Andress, and
Aldo Maccione, about the adventures of a cad in Napoleonic times. •
Scaramouche is the name of a suite by the French composer
Darius Milhaud for two pianos and some other combinations. Milhaud first composed the piece as an amalgam of music he wrote for theatre. • In the 1975 song "
Bohemian Rhapsody", by the British rock band
Queen, Scaramouche is asked if he would like to perform the dance known as a
fandango. • Inspired by "Bohemian Rhapsody",
Scaramouche is the name of the lead female role in the
jukebox musical play
We Will Rock You. •
Scaramouche Jones (2002) is a
solo play by Justin Butcher, which was premiered in its full form by
Pete Postlethwaite. In this 100-minute
monologue, an aging clown recounts, at the turn of the millennium, the
picaresque story of his life, from his early childhood in Trinidad at the start of the 20th century, the son of a
gypsy prostitute and an Englishman, through his harsh misadventures in the slave trade and in wartime Poland, where as a gravedigger he found his vocation as a clown while striving to keep children amused by
parodying their imminent slaughter. • In the opening chapter of the book ''
Phule's Company'' by
Robert Asprin, the main character Willard Phule uses Scaramouche as his alias ("Scaramouche?" Major Joshua said with a frown. "Aside from the obvious reference to the character from the novel."). • In
Tom Stoppard's
On the Razzle, Scaramouche is the
nom de plume used by sales clerk Weinberl in his letters while answering "lonely hearts advertisements". • Investor
Anthony Scaramucci was named the
White House communications director in July 2017 and removed later that same month. His very public presence in news media prompted an 8,185% increase in searches for
Scaramouche, according to
Merriam-Webster. Cartoonist
Ruben Bolling hinted at some striking congruities between Scaramucci's conduct in office and the defining traits of the theatrical figure. • The final season of the cartoon
Samurai Jack features a comedic antagonist named Scaramouche. This robotic character eventually becomes a disembodied head, similar to the scaramouche puppet. • In the game
Genshin Impact, the 6th of the Fatui Harbingers, who are all named after the commedia dell'arte, is known as
Scaramouche. • In the game
Hunt: Showdown, DLC Commedia Della Morte contains a playable character, Scaramuccia, and other theater-inspired equipment skins. • Charles Spencer reveals on page 112 of his 2024 memoir,
A Very Private School, that Scaramouche was the name of a "homegrown" sport played at Maidwell Hall, the English Midlands prep school he attended as a child in the 1970s. •
Scaramouche,
Reece Shearsmith's Character from the
Inside No. 9 episode 'Wuthering Heist' ==See also==