In addition to numerous reprints in magazines, anthologies, and textbooks as well as comic adaptation, "The Lottery" has been adapted for radio, live television, a 1953 ballet, films in 1969 and 1997, a TV movie, an opera, and a one-act play by Brainerd Duffield.
1951 radio version A radio adaptation by
NBC was broadcast March 14, 1951, as an episode of the anthology series
NBC Presents: Short Story. Writer
Ernest Kinoy expanded the plot to include scenes at various characters' homes before the lottery and a conversation between Bill and Tessie Hutchinson (Bill suggests leaving town before the lottery happens, but Tessie refuses because she wants to go shopping at Floyd Summers's store after the lottery is over). Kinoy deleted certain characters, including two of the Hutchinsons' three children, and added at least one character, John Gunderson, a schoolteacher who publicly objects to the lottery being held, and at first refuses to draw. Finally, Kinoy included an ending scene describing the townspeople's post-lottery activities and an afterword, in which the narrator suggested: "Next year, maybe there won't be a Lottery. It's up to all of us. Chances are, there will be, though."
Television adaptations Ellen M. Violett wrote the first television adaptation, seen on
Albert McCleery's
Cameo Theatre (1950–1955). The story served as the inspiration for the 2008
South Park episode "
Britney's New Look". The story was also parodied in the 2014
Regular Show episode "
Terror Tales of the Park IV", in the segment "The Hole" (a.k.a. "The Wonderful Adventure of the Mysterious Hole in the Park"), described as "reimagining some classic literature".
1969 film Larry Yust's short film
The Lottery (1969), produced as part of
Encyclopædia Britannicas "Short Story Showcase" series, was ranked by the Academic Film Archive "as one of the two bestselling educational films ever". It has an accompanying ten-minute commentary film
Discussion of "The Lottery" by
University of Southern California English professor James Durbin. Featuring Olive Dunbar, Jim Bowles,
William Fawcett,
Irene Tedrow and
Ed Begley Jr. in his third film appearance, Yust's adaptation has an atmosphere of naturalism and small-town authenticity with its shots of
pickup trucks in
Fellows, California, and the townspeople of Fellows and
Taft, California.
1996 TV film Anthony Spinner's feature-length TV film
The Lottery, which premiered September 29, 1996, on NBC, expands upon the original Shirley Jackson story. It was nominated for a 1997
Saturn Award for Best Single Genre Television Presentation.
Graphic novel In 2016,
Miles Hyman, a grandson of Jackson, created a graphic novel adaption titled ''Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery": The Authorized Graphic Adaptation
. His version abbreviates the wording of the source work and relies on graphics to portray other aspects of the narrative. He also wrote his own introduction. Alyson Ward of the Houston Chronicle'' wrote the graphics "push a little further than his grandmother's words did", though she stated Hyman's version reveals details of the story earlier than in the original work. ==See also==