Film Films
adapted from
The Government Inspector include: •
Eine Stadt steht kopf, or
A City Upside Down (1932), a German film directed by
Gustaf Gründgens •
Revizor (1933), a Czech film directed by
Martin Frič, starring
Vlasta Burian •
Antek policmajster (1935), a Polish film directed by
Michał Waszyński, starring
Adolf Dymsza •
The Inspector General (1949), a Hollywood
musical comedy starring
Danny Kaye. The film bears only passing resemblance to the original play. Kaye's version sets the story in Napoleon's empire, instead of Russia, and the main character presented to be the ersatz
inspector general is not a haughty young government bureaucrat, but a down-and-out illiterate, run out of a gypsy's travelling medicine show for not being greedy and deceptive enough. •
Afsar (1950), a
Bollywood musical comedy directed by
Chetan Anand •
Revizor (1952), USSR, directed by
Vladimir Petrov. •
Ammaldar ("the Government Inspector") (1953), an Indian
Marathi film directed by
P. L. Deshpande. •
Tamu Agung ("The Exalted Guest") (1955), an Indonesian film directed by
Usmar Ismail, is a loose adaptation of Gogol's play. The story is set in a small village in the island of
Java, shortly after the nation's independence. While not strictly a musical like its Hollywood counterpart, there are several musical numbers in the film. •
Anni ruggenti (
Roaring Years) (1962), an Italian film directed by
Luigi Zampa, starring
Nino Manfredi. In the film, the story is transposed to a small town in South Italy, during the years of
Fascism. •
Calzonzin Inspector (1974), a Mexican film directed and co-written by
Alfonso Arau, using the political cartoonist/writer
Rius's characters. •
Reviisori (1975), a Finnish straight adaptation. •
Tosun Paşa (1976), a Turkish film directed by
Kartal Tibet starring
Kemal Sunal. In the film, the story is transposed to Ottoman Empire. •
Incognito from St. Petersburg (1977), a Soviet film by
Leonid Gaidai •
De Boezemvriend ("The Bosom Friend") (1982), a Dutch film starring
André van Duin. A musical comedy which is not so much an adaptation of Gogol's work, but a remake of
The Inspector General. An itinerant dentist in the French-occupied Netherlands is taken for a French tax inspector. •
Revizor (1996), a Russian version directed by
Sergey Gazarov, with
Nikita Mikhalkov playing the Mayor.
Television In 1958 the British comedian
Tony Hancock appeared as Khlestakov in a live BBC Television version (which survives). The
PBS series
Wishbone adapted the story for an episode. In 2002 the Iranian playwright and director
Mohammad Rahmanian adapted a version for national TV called
Bazres-e-kol.
Theatre , has many reasons to be worried about a visit from the inspector general (
Maly Theatre (Moscow), 1905.
Fyodor Dostoyevsky played the postmaster Shpekin in a charity performance with proceeds going to the
Society for Aid to Needy Writers and Scholars in April 1860. In
Fritz Hochwälder's The Raspberry Picker ("Der Himbeerpflücker", 1965) the leaders of an Austrian town mistake a small town crook for a
Nazi war criminal and treat him as a returning hero. An Austrian
TV production starring
Helmut Qualtinger and
Kurt Sowinetz aired the same year.
Inspecting Carol (1991) by American playwright
Daniel J. Sullivan is a loose adaptation in which a man auditioning for a role in
A Christmas Carol at a small theatre is mistaken for an informer for the National Endowment for the Arts. In 2005, the
Chichester Festival Theatre produced a new version of the play translated by
Alistair Beaton.
The UN Inspector (2005) by
David Farr is a "freely adapted" version written for London's
National Theatre, which transposed the action to a modern-day ex-Soviet republic. Farr's adaptation has been translated into French by Nathalie Rivere de Carles and was performed in France in 2008. In 2006,
Greene Shoots Theatre performed an ensemble-style adaptation at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Directed by Steph Gunary (née Kirton), the acting used physical theatre, mime, and chorus work that underpinned the physical comedy. The application of
Commedia dell'arte-style characterisation both heightened the grotesque and sharpened the satire. In 2008,
Jeffrey Hatcher adapted the play for a summer run at the
Guthrie Theater in
Minneapolis. A slightly revised version of that adaptation played at
Milwaukee Repertory Theater in September 2009. In 2011, London's
Young Vic Theatre presented a new version adapted by
David Harrower, directed by
Richard Jones, starring
Julian Barratt,
Doon Mackichan and
Kyle Soller. In 2011 the
Stockholm City Theatre staged the play in an adaptation set in the
Soviet 1930s. In 2011 the
Abbey Theatre, Dublin performed an adaptation by
Roddy Doyle. Also in 2012 the
Residenz Theatre in
Munich performed an adaptation by
Herbert Fritsch with
Sebastian Blomberg as Khlestakov. In 2016 at the Yermolovoi Theater in Moscow there was a production by Sergei Zimliansky without words. The show was advertised as a comedy, in which music, costumes, dance, and movement by the actors tells the story in the absence of words. The play was also revived by the
Birmingham Repertory Theatre for a UK Tour in 2016 directed by Roxana Silbert. It toured
New Wolsey Theatre,
West Yorkshire Playhouse,
Theatre Royal Stratford East,
Nottingham Playhouse,
Liverpool Everyman and
Sheffield Crucible. This production was nominated for the
Laurence Olivier Award in Outstanding Achievement in Affiliate Theatre in the 2017 ceremony. In 2025, it returned to Chichester Festival Theatre in a new adaptation by
Phil Porter and starring
Tom Rosenthal as Khlestakov.
Operas •
Der Revisor (1907), by
Karel Weis(s); probably an operetta. •
The Inspector General (1928) by
Eugene (Jeno) Zádor; revised version first performed on 11 June 1971 by the Westcoast Opera Company at
El Camino College in Los Angeles. •
Il Revisore (1940), by
Amilcare Zanella; premiered in Trieste •
Der Revisor (1957), by
Werner Egk (1901–1983); first performed at the
Schlosstheater Schwetzingen at the
Schwetzingen Festival •
Dolazi revisor (1965), by Krešimir Fribec •
Chlestakows Wiederkehr (2008), by
Giselher Klebe; first performed at the
Landestheater Detmold •
The Inspector (2011), music by
John Musto, libretto by Mark Campbell, set in
Fascist Italy, premiered at the
Wolf Trap Opera Company.
Music Incidental music (1926) by Russian Jewish composer
Mikhail Gnessin.
Dance In 2019, Canadian choreographer
Crystal Pite and her
Kidd Pivot dance company adapted
The Government Inspector into a full-length dance-theatre work titled
Revisor. The piece premiered during Pite's residency at
Sadler's Wells Theatre, and was broadcast by the
BBC. ==Reception==