Many subsequent fictional works can be linked to
The Prisoner of Zenda; indeed, this novel spawned the genre known as
Ruritanian romance. What follows is a short list of those
homages with a clear debt to Anthony Hope's book. • The 1902 short story "Rupert the Resembler" is one of the so-called New Burlesques, a comedy parody by
Bret Harte. • The 30 May 1948 episode of the CBS radio series of
The Adventures of Sam Spade starring
Howard Duff is titled "The Prisoner of Zenda Caper" and involves a former actress who had starred in a film version of
The Prisoner of Zenda before her marriage and who had lived in a castle-like mansion built in the style of the Zenda castle. •
Dornford Yates acknowledged Hope's influence in his two novels
Blood Royal (1929) and
Fire Below, a.k.a.
By Royal Command (1930), which were set in the Ruritania-like Principality of Riechtenburg. •
John Buchan's
The House of the Four Winds (1935) is an homage to
The Prisoner of Zenda. •
Robert A. Heinlein adapted the
Zenda plotline to his science fiction novel
Double Star (1956). •
John Osborne's play
The Blood of the Bambergs (1962) turns the plot into a satire on royal weddings. • The 1965 comedy film
The Great Race included an extended
subplot that parodies
Zenda, including a climactic fencing scene between The Great Leslie (
Tony Curtis) and Baron Rolfe von Stuppe (
Ross Martin). While Curtis's character performs the heroics, it is
Jack Lemmon who plays the dual role of the drunken crown prince and Professor Fate, Leslie's rival/nemesis and reluctant impersonator of the prince. • Two episodes of the spoof spy television series
Get Smart, "The King Lives?" and "To Sire with Love, Parts 1 and 2", parodied the 1937 movie version, with
Don Adams affecting
Ronald Colman's accent. • The 1970 novel
Royal Flash by
George MacDonald Fraser purports to explain the real story behind
The Prisoner of Zenda, and indeed, in an extended
literary conceit, claims to be the inspiration for Hope's novel—the narrator of the memoirs, in the
framing story, tells his adventures to his lawyer, Hawkins, who can be assumed to be Anthony Hope.
Otto von Bismarck and other real people such as
Lola Montez are involved in the plot. It was adapted as the film
Royal Flash in 1975, directed by
Richard Lester, starring
Malcolm McDowell as Flashman and
Oliver Reed as Bismarck. • The 1978
Doctor Who television story "
The Androids of Tara" was loosely based on
The Prisoner of Zenda, having been commissioned under the working title "The Androids of Zenda." While overt references to the novel were dropped from the story during production, the basic plot remained. It featured
Tom Baker as the Doctor and
Mary Tamm in four roles: Romana and Princess Strella, and android doubles of each. The 1980
novelisation was written by
Terrance Dicks, who was script-editor on the 1984 BBC serialisation of
Zenda. •
The Zenda Vendetta (
TimeWars Book 4) by
Simon Hawke (1985) is a science-fiction version, part of a series which pits 27th-century terrorists the Timekeepers against the Time Commandos of the US Army Temporal Corps. The Timekeepers kill Rassendyll so that the Time Commando Finn Delaney is sent back to impersonate the impersonator, both to ensure that history follows its true path and to defeat the terrorists. In the finale, the Time Commandos assault Zenda Castle with lasers and atomic grenades, both to rescue the king and to destroy the Timekeepers base. • The 1992
Adventures in Odyssey episode "An Act of Nobility" is a whole plot reference to
The Prisoner of Zenda. •
John Spurling's novel
After Zenda (1995) is a
tongue-in-cheek modern adventure in which Karl, the secret great-grandson of Rudolf Rassendyll and Queen Flavia, goes to
post-Communist Ruritania, where he gets mixed up with various rebels and
religious sects before ending up as
constitutional monarch. •
The Prisoner of Zenda, Inc., a 1996 television version, is set in the contemporary United States and revolves around a high school boy who is the heir to a large corporation. The writer, Rodman Gregg, was inspired by the 1937 film version. •
De speelgoedzaaier, a
Spike and Suzy comic by
Willy Vandersteen, is loosely based on
The Prisoner of Zenda. • In "
The Prisoner of Benda", an episode of the animated TV series
Futurama,
Bender impersonates (or rather, switches bodies with) the Emperor of
Robo-Hungary as part of a scheme to steal the crown jewels. • The 1994 role-playing game
Castle Falkenstein lists
The Prisoner of Zenda as inspiration and even includes a character named Tarlenheim. •
The Prisoner of Windsor, an audio-book by
Mark Steyn, is both a sequel and an inversion of the story. Set in modern England, a Ruritanian from the House of Elphberg is called upon to stand in for an Englishman in London. ==Legacy==