Film and television A silent short film based on the story was released in 1923 as part of the
Stoll film series starring
Eille Norwood as Sherlock Holmes.
Peter Cushing portrayed Sherlock Holmes in the
1968 BBC series. "The Adventure of Blue Carbuncle" is one of only six surviving episodes.
Algimantas Masiulis played Sherlock Holmes in a 1980 television film adaptation of the story by
Belarusfilm, directed by Nikolai Lukyanov. In 1984, the story was adapted by John Hawkesworth and Paul Finney as an episode of the
Granada TV series, directed by
David Carson and starring
Jeremy Brett as Sherlock Holmes and
David Burke as Dr. Watson. The animated television series
Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century featured an adaptation of the story, replacing the goose with a blue stuffed toy called "Carbuncle" and the stone with a microprocessor.
Audio Edith Meiser adapted "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" as an episode of the radio series
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, which aired on 28 December 1932 (with
Richard Gordon as Sherlock Holmes and Leigh Lovell as Dr John Watson). Meiser also adapted the story as an episode for the radio series
The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes that aired on 4 January 1940 (with
Basil Rathbone as Holmes and
Nigel Bruce as Watson). Another adaptation of the story aired on 25 December 1944 (again starring Rathbone and Bruce, and with
Eric Snowden as Peterson). An adaptation written by Howard Merrill aired on 26 December 1948 (with John Stanley as Holmes and
Wendell Holmes as Watson). A radio adaptation by
Felix Felton was broadcast on the
BBC Home Service on 10 December 1952, as part of the
1952–1969 radio series starring
Carleton Hobbs as Holmes and
Norman Shelley as Watson. Other adaptations of the story in the same series aired on the BBC Home Service on 25 October 1957 (using the Felton adaptation) and on the
BBC Light Programme on 25 December 1961 (adapted by
Michael Hardwick) (repeated on the
BBC Home Service on 20 December 1962). A BBC adaptation by
John Keir Cross broadcast on the
BBC Light Programme on 14 December 1954 starred
John Gielgud as Holmes and
Ralph Richardson as Watson. The production first aired on the BBC Light Programme on 14 December 1954, and also aired on
NBC on 13 March 1955. On 17 January 1961, "Den Forsvunne Gåsesteken (The Lost Goose)", adapted by Gunnar Lie and directed by Barthold Halle, was broadcast on Norwegian radio with Erling Lindahl as Holmes and Einar Vaage as Watson. An audio drama based on the story was released in 1970 on
LP record, as one of several dramas starring
Robert Hardy as Holmes and
Nigel Stock as Watson. It was dramatised and produced by Michael Hardwick (who adapted the 1961 radio adaptation) and
Mollie Hardwick. On 26 November 1976, "Błękitny brylant księżnej Morcar (The Blue Carbuncle)", adapted by Robert Dlugoborski & Krzysztof Adamski and directed by Zofia Rakowiecka & Rena Tomaszewska, was broadcast on Polish radio with Piotr Fronczewski as Holmes and Jerzy Tkaczyk as Watson. "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" was adapted by Murray Burnett as an episode of
CBS Radio Mystery Theater featuring
Kevin McCarthy as Holmes and Court Benson as Watson. The episode first aired on 25 July 1977. A radio production adapted by Bill Morrison aired on 23 July 1978, with
Barry Foster as Holmes and
David Buck as Watson, as the 8th of 13 Holmes stories adapted for
BBC Radio 4. A BBC radio adaptation aired on 2 January 1991, as part of the
1989–1998 radio series starring
Clive Merrison as Holmes and
Michael Williams as Watson. The episode was adapted by
Bert Coules, and featured
Peter Blythe as James Ryder,
Ben Onwukwe as John Horner, and
Christopher Good as Peterson. In 2023, the podcast
Sherlock & Co. adapted the story in a two-episode adventure called "The Blue Carbuncle", starring Harry Attwell as Holmes, Paul Waggott as Watson and Marta da Silva as Mariana "Mrs. Hudson" Ametxazurra. • In 2025, Paul Waggott from
Sherlock & Co. podcast reprised his role as John Watson redoing the story in its original text from 1892's
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes as an Audiobook, from Watson's first person perspective.
Books The story was adapted into one of the books of the Hong Kong children's book series
The Great Detective Sherlock Holmes, as "The Fat Goose and Blue Carbuncle" (肥鵝與藍寶石). It is Book #3 of the original Chinese version, and book #6 of the English version. ==See also==