A play adaptation by
Sydney Rosenfeld debuted at
Wallack's Theatre in 1888 and ran for seven weeks. In addition to stretching out the story as long as possible to make it a play, at the end the choice was revealed to the audience: neither a lady nor a tiger, but an old hag. A radio dramatization of "The Lady, or the Tiger" by
Elliott and
Cathy Lewis aired on the show
On Stage in 1953.
Toyah Willcox and
Robert Fripp released a recording of "The Lady, or the Tiger?" and "The Discourager of Hesitancy" with Willcox reading the stories to electric guitar accompaniment by Fripp. "The Lady, or the Tiger?" is one of three short stories that were adapted into the 1966
musical comedy The Apple Tree. The story served as inspiration for
Raymond Smullyan's puzzle book by the same title,
The Lady, or the Tiger?. The first set of
logic puzzles in the book had a similar scenario to the short story in which a king gives each prisoner a choice between a number of doors; behind each one was either a lady or a tiger. However, the king bases the prisoner's fate on intelligence and not luck by posting a statement on each door that can be true or false.
The Lady, or the Tiger? was adapted into a short film by
Encyclopaedia Britannica Educational Corporation in 1970. "The Purr-fect Crime", Season 1, Episode 19 of the U.S. television series
Batman ends with a cliffhanger in which
Catwoman has Batman locked in a room with two doors; one of which opens to her, and the other opens to a tiger. Over an intercom she taunts him with "Which will it be, Batman? The lady or the tiger?" Batman has no hint and chooses the door that has the tiger. The story serves as the namesake for
They Might Be Giants' song "The Lady and The Tiger", though the song differs from the story considerably, instead being about a conversation between the lady and the tiger as they wait for the doors to be opened. ==See also==