, Andersen's first illustrator (1850) •
Ub Iwerks did a 1934
Cinecolor cartoon based on the story entitled "
The Brave Tin Soldier". The cartoon's plot is different from the original story. The antagonist is not a Jack-in-the-Box, but rather a toy king who wants the ballerina for himself. The tin soldier attacks the king, and as a result is put on trial and sentenced to death via firing squad. The ballerina pleads for his life to be spared, but her pleas are ignored. She then stands alongside the tin soldier and both are shot into a burning fireplace, where he melts into the shape of a heart with her. In the cartoon's ending, both the tin soldier and ballerina are sent to "Toy Heaven", where the tin soldier now has both legs. • A shortened version of the tale was planned for the 1940
Disney animated film
Fantasia, as indicated by 1938 storyboards, but the ending of the segment did not satisfy
Walt Disney and the story was set aside. •
George Pal's war-themed 1941
Puppetoon, "Rhythm in the Ranks", is likely a loose adaptation of Andersen's story, with a toy soldier getting discharged after falling in love with an ice-skating ballerina. •
Paul Grimault (with
Jacques Prévert) did a 1947 colour French cartoon
Le Petit Soldat that portrayed the title character as a toy acrobat who is called to war and returns injured but determined to rescue his ballerina. •
Marcia Brown's 1953 picture book illustrating
M. R. James's translation of the story was awarded a
Caldecott Honor. •
Ivo Caprino's 1955 puppet movie "The Steadfast Tin Soldier". • In 1971, the Japanese anime anthology series
Andersen Monogatari made an episode adaptation. • Andersen's contemporary
August Bournonville choreographed the tale for his ballet
A Fairy Tale in Pictures, and
George Balanchine choreographed the tale in 1975, allowing the soldier and the ballerina to express their love before the ballerina is blown into the fire. • In 1985,
Harmony Gold made an English dub of a 1980s Italian adaptation of the story,
The Little Train. • In 1986,
Atkinson Film-Arts made an animated adaptation featuring the voices of
Rick Jones,
Terrence Scammell, and Robert Bockstael, with narration by
Christopher Plummer. • In 1989, Studio Miniatur Filmowych made an animated adaptation. • In 1991, it was adapted into an animated television movie as part of
Timeless Tales from Hallmark, which was produced by
Hanna-Barbera and
Hallmark. It featured the voices of
George Newbern as the Tin Soldier,
Megan Mullally as the Ballerina,
Tim Curry as the Jack-in-the-box and
Paul Williams as a frog named Frogbauten. • Children's author
Tor Seidler adapted the book in 1992, with illustrations by
Fred Marcellino. • In 1995,
Jon Voight directed and appeared in
The Tin Soldier, a
Showtime family film loosely based on Andersen's story. • In 1996, Vivian Little and Kathleen Mills adapted Anderson's story into a full-length ballet for the Dance Fremont studio in
Seattle. The ballet is still produced every winter, as an alternative to the popular Christmas ballet
The Nutcracker, which many American studios produce in December. Dance Fremont centers the story around a young deaf boy who receives the toys for Christmas, and uses
Signed Exact English for all dialogue. • In the 2000
Disney animated film
Fantasia 2000, an adaptation of the tale is set to the first movement of the
Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Major by
Dmitri Shostakovich. The segment differs from Andersen's tale: there are only five soldiers, but still only one with one leg; the ballerina appears to be made of
porcelain; the soldier is disappointed to discover the ballerina has two legs, but the ballerina still accepts him; at the end, the jack-in-the-box villain is the one that perishes in the fire instead of the soldier and ballerina who both remain in one piece. • In 2002, the series
The Fairytaler adapted it in the story "The Hardy Tin Soldier". • In
Stieg Larsson's 2006 thriller
The Girl Who Played with Fire, the fiercely independent protagonist
Lisbeth Salander compares the journalist
Mikael Blomkvist, who had stayed loyal to her despite her repeated blatant rejection of him, with Andersen's steadfast tin soldier (implicitly comparing herself with Andersen's ballerina). •
Mike Mignola's graphic novel
Baltimore, or The Steadfast Tin Soldier and the Vampire fuses the poignancy of "The Steadfast Tin Soldier" with supernatural
Dracula myths, set in a post-
World War I environment.
Kate DiCamillo's
The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane (2006) makes use of the tale's themes. ==References==