Films There have been four film adaptations of
The Mystery of Edwin Drood. The first two are silent pictures, released in 1909 (British, directed by Arthur Gilbert), and 1914 (American, directed by
Herbert Blaché and
Tom Terriss), and are unavailable to the general public and have been little seen since they were released. They were followed by: •
Mystery of Edwin Drood (1935) released by
Universal Pictures and directed by
Stuart Walker, starring
Claude Rains as Jasper,
Douglass Montgomery as Neville,
Heather Angel as Rosa,
Valerie Hobson as Helena, and
David Manners as Drood. •
The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1993) starring
Robert Powell as John Jasper,
Andrew Sachs as Durdles,
Freddie Jones as Mayor Sapsea,
Glyn Houston as Mr Grewgious and
Gemma Craven as Miss Twinkleton.
Television The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1960) was a British television miniseries produced by
ITV and broadcast live in eight episodes, starring
Donald Sinden as John Jasper,
Richard Pearson as Mr Crisparkle,
Tim Seely as Edwin Drood, and Barbara Brown as Rosa Bud, with each episode featuring an introduction by actor Michael Ingrams. This serial is believed to have been
lost during
the archival purges in the 1960s and 70s, as no audio or video recordings are known to exist. Photographs taken from contemporary newspaper clippings exist in the
BFI's library. A
BBC television version, adapted with an original ending by
Gwyneth Hughes and directed by
Diarmuid Lawrence, aired on BBC Two on 10 and 11 January 2012 and in the PBS series
Masterpiece on 15 April 2012.
Taina Edvina Druda (
The Mystery of Edwin Drood) is a TV miniseries produced in Russia in 1980, adapted by Georgiy Kapralov and Alexander Orlov, directed by Alexander Orlov and with music by
Eduard Artemiev. The cast included
Valentin Gaft, Avangard Leontiev,
Elena Koreneva and
Margarita Terekhova. The performance ends at the same point as Dickens's unfinished text; the narrator then discusses various possible solutions that Dickens might have intended, and assesses their plausibility.
Radio In September 1941 the BBC Home Service broadcast a 3-episode adaptation of
The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Audrey Lucas. The last instalment did not present a solution, but allowed the characters to discuss among themselves how their creator intended to end the story. On 5 and 12 January 1953, the CBS
Suspense radio programme aired a two-part adaptation of
The Mystery of Edwin Drood. It depicts John Jasper (played by
Herbert Marshall) as the killer, tricked into giving himself away. In 1965, for
Radio 4's long-running "
Saturday Night Theatre",
Mollie Hardwick adapted the novel and suggested an ending. The cast included
Francis de Wolff as the Narrator, John Gabriel as John Jasper,
Mary Wimbush as Princess Puffer,
Patrick Barr as Crisparkle,
Malcolm Terris as Edwin Drood,
Rosalind Shanks as Rosa, Nigel Graham as Neville Landless, Isabel Rennie as Helena Landless and
Denys Blakelock as Mr Grewgious. It was repeated on 4 October 1970. The play is held in the BBC Archives (T42136, 89'40"), and an off-air recording exists; this may be heard online A five-part adaptation based on the Leon Garfield completion written by David Buck and directed by Gordon House was broadcast as
BBC Radio 4's
Classic Serial from 3 to 30 March 1990. The cast included
Ian Holm as Jasper,
John Moffatt as Datchery,
Gareth Thomas as Crisparkle,
Michael Cochrane as Tartar,
Timothy Bateson as Sapsea,
Gordon Gostelow as Durdles and
Anna Cropper as Mrs Tope;
Mary Wimbush reprised her 1965 role of Princess Puffer and John Gabriel returned to play the role of Mr Grewgious. It was last repeated on
BBC Radio 4 Extra from 27 September to 1 October 2021. A 10-part adaptation in 15-minute daily episodes, this time written by
Mike Walker and directed by
Jeremy Mortimer, was broadcast on
BBC Radio 4 from 21 December 2020 to 1 January 2021. The cast included
Pippa Nixon as
Kate Dickens (who acts as both narrator and commentator), Joel MacCormack as John Jasper, Isabella Inchbald as Rosa,
Damian Lynch as Crisparkle, Rachel Atkins as Princess Puffer, Maanuv Thiara as Neville Landless, Halema Hussain as Helena Landless,
Peter Davison as Mr Grewgious and Iwan Davies as Edwin Drood. Some characters, including Lt Tartar and Mayor Sapsea, are omitted from this version and Bazzard, though mentioned by Mr Grewgious, does not appear. In this adaptation, Helena disguises herself as Dick Datchery, Edwin Drood survives the attack from Jasper, and Jasper kills himself by jumping from the cathedral tower after it is revealed that he was in love with Edwin, a major departure from his character and motivations in the original novel and other adaptations.
Theatre Following almost immediately upon Charles Dickens's death, playwrights and theatre companies have mounted versions of
The Mystery of Edwin Drood with varying degrees of popularity, success, and faithfulness to the original work. A
musical comedy with book, music and lyrics by
Rupert Holmes proved to be the first modern major theatrical adaptation. Because Dickens's book was left unfinished, the musical hinges upon a novel idea: the audience decides by vote which of the characters is the murderer. The musical's suspect pool includes John Jasper, Neville Landless, Rosa Bud, Helena Landless, Mr Crisparkle, Princess Puffer, and Mr Bazzard. Adding further interactivity, the audience chooses Rosa Bud, Neville Landless, Helena Landless, Mr Crisparkle or Mr Bazzard to play the role of Dick Datchery, since the cast votes that Edwin Drood actually was murdered and cannot be Dick Datchery. Further, two characters are chosen to develop a romance. Holmes wrote brief alternative endings for every possible voting outcome, even the most unlikely. For reasons of dramatic variety, John Jasper is presented as a red herring in the final solution. The audience is discouraged from voting for him, and in the final scene he confesses to the murder only for Durdles to reveal that Jasper hallucinated the attack on Drood after stumbling upon the scene of the murder, and disposed of the body thinking he had committed the crime himself.
The Mystery of Edwin Drood musical, also known during its original run simply as
Drood, was first produced in 1985 by the
New York Shakespeare Festival, and then transferred to Broadway, where it ran for 608 performances (and 24 previews). It won five 1986
Tonys, including Best Musical, as well as
Drama Desk and
Edgar awards. The show ran for ten weeks in the
West End in 1987 starring
Ernie Wise as Edwin Cartwright. The musical has since played successfully in numerous regional and amateur productions. In 2012, Aria Entertainment produced a London revival of the musical at the
Landor Theatre in April/May, which transferred to the
Arts Theatre, West End, for a limited season from 18 May to 17 June. The cast included former
Coronation Street star
Wendi Peters as Princess Puffer, with Natalie Day as Edwin Drood, Daniel Robinson as John Jasper and Victoria Farley as Rosa Bud. The production was directed by Matthew Gould. A Broadway revival by the
Roundabout Theatre Company during the 2012–2013 season was directed by
Scott Ellis and starred
Chita Rivera as Princess Puffer and
Stephanie J. Block as Edwin Drood. The final "Murderer" tabulations assigned to each of the characters and the identity of "Datchery" were displayed overhead on chalkboards in the foyer, visible to the departing audience. ==References to the book==