Theatre The novel was adapted for the stage in 1897. The production by Lorimer Stoddard proved a Broadway triumph for actress
Minnie Maddern Fiske when it opened on 2 March 1897. A
copyright performance was given at
St James's Theatre in London on the same date. It was revived in America in 1902 and then made into a motion picture by
Adolph Zukor in 1913, starring Mrs. Fiske; no copies remain. In the UK, an adaptation,
Tess, by H. Mountford, opened at the
Grand Theatre in
Blackpool on 5 January 1900. The play transferred to the
Comedy Theatre for 17 performances from 14 April 1900 with a slightly different cast, including
Fred Terry as Alec and
Oswald Yorke as Angel. Hardy wrote to the Times stating that he had played no part in the dramatisation, did not authorise its production and did not know how the play unfolded, other than by what he had read in the papers. In 1924, Hardy wrote a British theatrical adaptation and chose
Gertrude Bugler, a
Dorchester girl from the original Hardy Players to play Tess. The Hardy Players (re-formed in 2005) was an amateur group from Dorchester that re-enacted Hardy's novels. Bugler was acclaimed, but prevented from taking the London stage part by the jealousy of Hardy's wife
Florence; Hardy had said that young Gertrude was the true incarnation of the Tess he had imagined. Years before writing the novel, Hardy had been inspired by the beauty of her mother Augusta Way, then an 18-year-old milkmaid, when he visited Augusta's father's farm in
Bockhampton. When Hardy saw Bugler (he rehearsed The Hardy Players at the hotel run by her parents), he immediately recognised her as a young image of the now older Augusta. staged as Woodhall described it from her own appearance in Hardy's original adaptation: "Tess, accompanied by Angel Clare, is arrested by a phalanx of constables for the murder of her other suitor Alec d'Urberville at sunrise, after a night spent within the bluestone towers of a lonely
henge on the bleak and wind swept expanse of Salisbury Plain." • 2012: ''Tess of the d'Urbervilles'' was produced into a piece of musical theatre by
Youth Music Theatre UK as part of their summer season, and further developed, edited and performed in 2017 at the Theatre Royal, Winchester, and
The Other Palace, London in 2018. • 2019:
Tess – The Musical, a new British musical by composer Michael Blore and playwright Michael Davies, received a workshop production at
The Other Place, the
Royal Shakespeare Company's studio theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, in February 2019.
Opera 1906: An Italian operatic version written by
Frederic d'Erlanger was first performed in Naples, but the run was cut short by an eruption of
Mount Vesuvius. When the opera came to London three years later, Hardy, then 69, attended the premiere.
Film, television and radio The story has also been filmed at least eight times, including three for general release through cinemas and four television productions.
Cinema • 1913: The
"lost" silent version, mentioned under Theatre, starring
Minnie Maddern Fiske as Tess and Scots-born
David Torrence as Alec. • 1924:
Another lost silent version was made with
Blanche Sweet (Tess),
Stuart Holmes (Alec), and
Conrad Nagel (Angel). • 1944:
Man Ki Jeet, Indian
Hindi-language film adaptation directed by
W. Z. Ahmed. • 1967:
Dulhan Ek Raat Ki, Indian Hindi-language film starring
Nutan,
Dharmendra and
Rehman. • 1979:
Roman Polanski's film
Tess with
Nastassja Kinski (Tess),
Leigh Lawson (Alec), and
Peter Firth (Angel). • 1996:
Prem Granth, Indian Hindi-language film adaptation directed by
Rajiv Kapoor - starring
Rishi Kapoor and
Madhuri Dixit in the lead roles. • 2011:
Michael Winterbottom 21st-century Indian set film
Trishna with
Freida Pinto and
Riz Ahmed.
Television and radio • 1952:
BBC TV, directed by Michael Henderson, and starring
Barbara Jefford (Tess),
Michael Aldridge (Alec), and
Donald Eccles (Angel). • 1960:
ITV,
ITV Play of the Week, "Tess", directed by Michael Currer-Briggs, and starring
Geraldine McEwan (Tess),
Maurice Kaufmann (Alec), and
Jeremy Brett (Angel). • 1998:
London Weekend Television's
three-hour mini-series ''Tess of the D'Urbervilles'', directed by Ian Sharp, and starring
Justine Waddell (Tess),
Jason Flemyng (Alec), and
Oliver Milburn (Angel), the latter Dorset-born. • 2008: A
four-hour BBC adaptation, written by
David Nicholls, aired in the United Kingdom in September and October 2008 in four parts, and in the United States on the
PBS series
Masterpiece Classic in January 2009 in two parts. The cast included
Gemma Arterton (Tess),
Hans Matheson (Alec),
Eddie Redmayne (Angel),
Ruth Jones (Joan),
Anna Massey (Mrs d'Urberville), and
Kenneth Cranham (Reverend James Clare). • 2020: The
BBC Radio 4 series "Hardy's Women" featured a three-part adaptation of the novel from Tess's perspective.
Other • 2022: English rock band
Half Man Half Biscuit's
Tess Of The Dormobiles on their fifteenth album
The Voltarol Years features many references to the book within the lyrics. == References ==