Film • The film
Herr Tartüff was produced by
Ufa in 1926. It was directed by
F. W. Murnau and starred
Emil Jannings as Tartuffe,
Lil Dagover as Elmire and
Werner Krauss as Orgon. •
Gérard Depardieu directed and starred in the title role of
Le tartuffe, the 1984
French film version. • The 2007
French film Molière contains many references, both direct and indirect, to
Tartuffe, the most notable of which is that the character of Molière masquerades as a priest and calls himself "Tartuffe". The end of the film implies that Molière went on to write
Tartuffe based on his experiences in the film.
Stage • The National Theatre, England, adapted this for stage in 1967 at
The Old Vic Theatre, London. Translated by
Richard Wilbur, directed by
Tyrone Guthrie and ran for 39 performances, closing in 1969. •
Tartuffe in Texas is set in
Dallas,
Texas; published in 2012 by Eldridge Publishing. •
Bell Shakespeare Company,
Tartuffe - The Hypocrite translated from original French by
Justin Fleming in 2014 and earlier for
Melbourne Theatre Company in 2008, with uniquely varied rhyming verse forms. • American Stage Theatre Company in
St. Petersburg, Florida, adapted Tartuffe in 2016, staged in modern-day as a political satire, with Orgon, as a wealthy American businessman who entrusts his reputation and his fortune to up-and-coming politician, Tartuffe. • It was adapted for an Australian audience in the "
post-truth" age by playwright Philip Kavanagh, performed by the
State Theatre Company of South Australia and
Brink Productions, October–November 2016 in
Adelaide. • The
Tobacco Factory Theatre set the play in 2017 London, with Tartuffe imagined as a business guru and Orgon as an old-school
Tory politician. The script was translated with rhyming couplets by Andrew Hilton and Dominic Power. • In 2022, a feminist reimagining written by Flora Davies and Siân Lawrence was presented at Oxford's BT Studio by Green Sun Productions to great acclaim. This adaptation sets the action within a fictional feminist consultancy firm; Orgon and Elmire become Co-CEOs and Tartuffe a new hire in the office. The production transferred to the Edinburgh Fringe in August 2023. • In 2025, a new adaptation of the play by
Lucas Hnath opened off-Broadway as a production of the
New York Theatre Workshop. The cast includes
Matthew Broderick as Tartuffe and
David Cross as Orgon, and the production is directed by Sarah Benson. Another new adaptation of the play, starring
André De Shields as Tartuffe, was announced on September 4, 2025. This version took place at the
House of the Redeemer and began performances on October 3.
Television • Productions for French television were filmed in 1971, 1975, 1980, 1983 and 1998. • On 28 November 1971, the BBC broadcast as part of their
Play of the Month series a production directed by
Basil Coleman using the Richard Wilbur translation and featuring
Michael Hordern as Tartuffe,
Mary Morris as Madame Pernelle and
Patricia Routledge as Dorine. •
Donald Moffat starred in a 1978 videotaped
PBS television production with
Stefan Gierasch as Orgon,
Tammy Grimes as Elmire,
Ray Wise as Damis,
Victor Garber as Valère and
Geraldine Fitzgerald as Madame Pernelle. The translation was by
Richard Wilbur and the production was directed by
Kirk Browning. Taped in a television studio without an audience, this production was based on at the 1977
Circle in the Square Theatre production (see
Modern Productions above), but with a slightly different cast –
John Wood played Tartuffe in the Broadway version, and Madame Pernelle was played by
Mildred Dunnock in that same production. • The BBC adapted the Bill Alexander production for the
Royal Shakespeare Company. This television version was first screened in the UK during November 1985 in the
Theatre Night series with most of the original cast, including
Antony Sher,
Nigel Hawthorne, Stephanie Fayerman and
Alison Steadman, reprising their stage roles (see "Modern Productions" above) (
Lesley Sharp replaced Katy Behean as Mariane and
Michael Maloney replaced
Mark Rylance as Damis). While this television version does derive from the
RSC's 1983 stage production, IMDb is inaccurate in dating this videotaped version from that year. The BFI Film & TV Database indicates the start date for this programme's production was in 1984, while the copyright date is for 1985. • The 2022
Birmingham Repertory Theatre version by
Anil Gupta and Richard Pinto was broadcast on
BBC Four on 12 March 2023. The production relocated the story to the modern-day
Pakistani-
Muslim community of
Sparkhill,
Birmingham and had previously been produced by the
Royal Shakespeare Company in 2018.
Opera • The composer
Kirke Mechem based his opera
Tartuffe on the play.
Audio • On 10 December 1939, an hour-long adaptation was broadcast on the NBC radio series
Great Plays. • In 1968,
Caedmon Records recorded and released on LP (TRS 332) a production performed that same year by the Stratford National Theatre of Canada as part of the
Stratford Festival (see "
Stratford Shakespeare Festival production history") using the
Richard Wilbur translation and directed by Jean Gascon. The cast included
Douglas Rain as Orgon and
William Hutt as Tartuffe. • In 2009,
BBC Radio 3 broadcast an adaptation directed by Gemma Bodinetz and translated by
Roger McGough, based on the 2008 Liverpool Playhouse production (see "Modern Productions" above), with
John Ramm as Tartuffe, Joseph Alessi as Orgon,
Simon Coates as Cleante,
Annabelle Dowler as Dorine,
Rebecca Lacey as Elmire, Robert Hastie as Damis and Emily Pithon as Marianne. •
L.A. Theatre Works performed and recorded a production in 2010 () with the
Richard Wilbur translation and featuring
Brian Bedford as Tartuffe,
Martin Jarvis as Orgon,
Alex Kingston as Elmire,
Matthew Rhys as Valere,
Gia Carides as Dorine, and
John de Lancie as Cleante. The production was directed by
Dakin Matthews. • In 2022, for Moliere's 400th Anniversary, a modern English adaptation is released, starring
David Serero as Tartuffe. ==Notes==