Film and television A 1921 short film was adapted from the story as part of the
Stoll film series featuring
Eille Norwood as Sherlock Holmes. The story was adapted for a 1951 TV episode of
Sherlock Holmes starring
Alan Wheatley as Holmes. The first American television adaptation of the story was in the 1954–1955 television series
Sherlock Holmes starring
Ronald Howard. An adaptation of "The Red-Headed League" was used for an episode of the 1965 television series
Sherlock Holmes starring
Douglas Wilmer as Holmes and
Nigel Stock as Watson, with
Toke Townley as Jabez Wilson. In the 1985
television adaptation starring
Jeremy Brett, the scheme was masterminded by
Professor Moriarty and Clay is Moriarty's star pupil of crime (Holmes and Jones explicitly note that Clay is usually more of an impulsive criminal who would not come up with something this elaborate on his own). An episode of the animated 1999–2001 television series
Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century titled "The Red-Headed League" was based on the story. In the NHK puppetry television series
Sherlock Holmes, Jabez Wilson is a pupil of
Beeton School as well as Holmes and Watson and is invited to the Red-Headed Club by his senior Duncan Ross. But strangely enough, what he does in the club is painting balls, stones and bottles red. Holmes suspects that it is a means for Ross to ensure Wilson stays away from a certain place.
Audio Edith Meiser adapted the story as the third episode of the radio series
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, which aired on 5 January 1931, starring
Clive Brook as Sherlock Holmes and Leigh Lovell as Dr. Watson. Other episodes adapted from the story aired on 24 May 1933 (with
Richard Gordon as Holmes and Lovell as Watson) and 8 February 1936 (with Gordon as Holmes and Harry West as Watson). Edith Meiser also adapted the story for the radio series
The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes with
Basil Rathbone as Holmes and
Nigel Bruce as Watson. The episode aired on 27 October 1940. Other episodes adapted from the story aired on 28 May 1943, and on 2 June 1947 (with
Tom Conway as Holmes and Bruce as Watson). The story was also read by Basil Rathbone in a 1966 recording released by
Caedmon Records. A radio adaptation starring
Carleton Hobbs as Holmes and
Norman Shelley as Watson aired on the
BBC Home Service in 1953, as part of the
1952–1969 radio series. Hobbs and Shelley also played Holmes and Watson respectively in a 1957 radio adaptation on the BBC Home Service, and a 1964 radio adaptation on the
BBC Light Programme.
John Gielgud played Holmes and
Ralph Richardson played Watson in a radio adaptation of "The Red-Headed League" which aired on 19 October 1954 on the BBC Light Programme. The production also aired in January 1955 on
NBC radio and in May 1956 on
ABC radio. A radio adaptation aired on 26 April 1977, on the series
CBS Radio Mystery Theater.
Kevin McCarthy was the voice of Holmes. An adaptation aired on BBC radio in June 1978, starring
Barry Foster as Holmes and
David Buck as Watson. It was adapted by
Michael Bakewell. "The Red-Headed League" was dramatised for
BBC Radio 4 in 1990 by Vincent McInerney as an episode of the
1989–1998 radio series, starring
Clive Merrison as Holmes and
Michael Williams as Watson. It also featured
James Wilby as Vincent Spaulding. In 2024, the podcast
Sherlock & Co. adapted the story in a three-episode adventure, starring Harry Attwell as Holmes, Paul Waggott as Watson and Marta da Silva as Mariana "Mrs. Hudson" Ametxazurra. • In 2025, Paul Waggott from
Sherlock & Co. podcast reprised his role as John Watson redoing the story in its original text from 1892's
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes as an Audiobook, from Watson's first person perspective.
Stage The story, along with "
The Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax", "
The Adventure of the Empty House", and "
The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton", provided the source material for the play
The Return of Sherlock Holmes.
Video games Multiple references to the story are made in the two
The Great Ace Attorney games. In the first game,
The Great Ace Attorney: Adventures, Herlock Sholmes (who is Doyle's Sherlock Holmes in the original Japanese version, with his name changed for legal reasons as part of localization) incorrectly deduces that one of the involved parties in the final case was trying to dig a tunnel into a bank from a pawnshop, which is quickly disproven by protagonist Ryunosuke Naruhodo. In the second game,
The Great Ace Attorney 2: Resolve, Sholmes is fooled by a fraudulent advertisement from the "Red-Headed League" and drinks a potion that turns his hair red before being scammed out of five shillings. Sholmes later has the two leaders of the "league" arrested, and their testimony about the scam proves important in revealing the truth of the international conspiracy at the heart of the game's plot. In addition, the name John Clay is briefly mentioned in another case, though as the name of a policeman rather than a criminal, and a character is named Duncan Ross, although he is seemingly unrelated to the Red-Headed League.
Books It was adapted into one of the books of the Hong Kong children's book series
The Great Detective Sherlock Holmes, as "The Great Robbery" (驚天大劫案). It is Book #8 of the original Chinese version, and book #9 of the English version. ==See also==