filming an episode of the
BBC Father Brown series Film •
Walter Connolly starred as the title character in the 1934 film
Father Brown, Detective, based on "The Blue Cross". Connolly would later be cast as another famous fictional detective,
Nero Wolfe, in the 1937 film
The League of Frightened Men and played
Charlie Chan on NBC radio from 1932 to 1938. • The 1954 film
Father Brown (released in the US as
The Detective) featured
Alec Guinness as Father Brown. Like the 1934 film starring Connolly, it was based on "The Blue Cross". An experience while playing the character reportedly prompted Guinness's own conversion to Roman Catholicism. •
Heinz Rühmann played Father Brown in two West German adaptations of Chesterton's stories,
Das schwarze Schaf (
The Black Sheep, 1960) and ''
Er kann's nicht lassen (He Can't Stop Doing It
, 1962) with both music scores written by German composer Martin Böttcher. In these films Brown is an Irish priest. The actor later appeared in Operazione San Pietro'' (also starring
Edward G. Robinson, 1967) as Cardinal Brown, but the film is not based on any Chesterton story.
Radio • A
Mutual Broadcasting System radio series,
The Adventures of Father Brown (1945), featured
Karl Swenson as Father Brown, Bill Griffis as Flambeau and Gretchen Douglas as Nora, the rectory housekeeper. • In 1974, to celebrate the centenary of Chesterton's birth, five Father Brown stories starring
Leslie French as Father Brown and
Willie Rushton as Chesterton were broadcast on
BBC Radio 4. • BBC Radio 4 produced a series of
Father Brown Stories from 1984 to 1986, starring
Andrew Sachs as Father Brown. •
Bert Coules's dramatisation of "The Secret Garden" aired on BBC Radio 4 in 2011, starring Richard Greenwood as Father Brown. • A series of 16 Chesterton stories was produced by the Colonial Radio Theatre in
Boston, Massachusetts. Actor J. T. Turner played Father Brown; all scripts were written by British radio dramatist
M. J. Elliott.
Imagination Theater added this series to their rotation with the broadcast of "The Hammer of God" on 5 May 2013.
Television • "The Quick One" was adapted for the 1964 BBC anthology series
Detective, with
Mervyn Johns as Father Brown. •
Josef Meinrad played Father Brown in an Austrian TV series (1966–72), which followed Chesterton's plots quite closely. • In 1974,
Kenneth More starred in a 13-episode
Father Brown TV series, each episode adapted from one of Chesterton's short stories. The series, produced by Sir
Lew Grade for
Associated Television, was shown in the United States as part of
PBS's
Mystery!. They were released on DVD in the UK in 2003 by
Acorn Media UK, and in the United States four years later by Acorn Media. • A US film made for television,
Sanctuary of Fear (1979), starred
Barnard Hughes as an Americanised, modernised Father Brown in
Manhattan,
New York City, and
Kay Lenz, as Carol Bains. The film was intended as the pilot for a series but critical and audience reaction was unfavourable, largely due to the changes made to the character, and the mundane
thriller plot. • An Italian television miniseries in six episodes,
"I racconti di padre Brown" (
The Tales of Father Brown) starring
Renato Rascel in the title role and
Arnoldo Foà as Flambeau was produced and broadcast by the national TV
RAI between December 1970 and February 1971 to a wide audience (one episode peaked at 12 million viewers). • "The Blast of the Book" was adapted into a Soviet stop-motion short in 1990. • A Catholic cable channel,
EWTN, produced the Father Brown story "The Honour of Israel Gow" as a 2009 episode of the television series
The Theater of the Word. • A German television series superficially based on the character of Father Brown,
Pfarrer Braun, was launched in 2003. Pfarrer Guido Braun, from
Bavaria, played by
Ottfried Fischer, solves murder cases on the (fictitious) island of Nordersand in the first two episodes. Later, other German landscapes like the
Harz, the
Rhine, and
Meißen in Saxony became sets for the show. Martin Böttcher again wrote the score and he was instructed by the producers to write a title theme hinting at the theme of the movies with Heinz Rühmann. Twenty-two episodes were made, which ran very successfully in Germany on
ARD. The 22nd episode, which was aired on 20 March 2014, concluded the series with the death of the protagonist. • In 2012, the BBC commissioned the 10-episode series
Father Brown starring British actor
Mark Williams in the title role. It aired on
BBC One beginning January 2013, Monday to Friday, over a two-week period in the afternoon. The era and location are moved to the Cotswolds of the early 1950s and used adaptations and original stories. Filming for the series began around the
Cotswolds in the summer of 2012. By 2026,
140 episodes had been aired across 13 series.
Audio •
Ignatius Press published an audiobook version of
The Innocence of Father Brown in 2008. The book is read by actor Kevin O'Brien and features introductions to each story written and read by
Dale Ahlquist, president of the American Chesterton Society. The book was a winner of the 2009 Foreword Audio Book Awards. == Appearances and references in other works ==