The river trip is easy to recreate, following the detailed description, and this is sometimes done by fans of the book. Much of the route remains unchanged. For example, all the
pubs and inns named are still open, with the exception of
The Crown in Marlow, which closed in 2008.
Audio Audiobooks of the book have been released many times, with different narrators, including
Sir Timothy Ackroyd (2013),
David McCallum (1994),
Hugh Laurie (1999),
Nigel Planer (1999),
Martin Jarvis (2005) and Steven Crossley (2011). The
BBC has broadcast on radio a number of dramatisations of the story, including a musical version in 1962 starring
Kenneth Horne,
Leslie Phillips and
Hubert Gregg, a three-episode version in 1984 with
Jeremy Nicholas playing all the characters and a two-part adaptation for
Classic Serial in 2013 with
Hugh Dennis,
Steve Punt and
Julian Rhind-Tutt.
Film and television •
Three Men in a Boat, a 1920 silent British film with
Lionelle Howard as J.,
H. Manning Haynes as Harris and
Johnny Butt as George. •
Three Men in a Boat a 1933 British film with
William Austin,
Edmund Breon, and
Billy Milton. •
Three Men in a Boat, a 1956 British film with
David Tomlinson as J.,
Jimmy Edwards as Harris and
Laurence Harvey as George. •
Three Men in a Boat, a 1961 German film very loosely based on the book. •
Three Men in a Boat, a 1975
BBC-produced version for television adapted by
Tom Stoppard and directed by
Stephen Frears, with
Tim Curry as J.,
Michael Palin as Harris, and
Stephen Moore as George. •
Three Men in a Boat, not counting the dog (Russian: Трое в лодке, не считая собаки), a 1979, musical comedy filmed by
Soviet television, with
Andrei Mironov as J.,
Aleksandr Shirvindt as Harris and
Mikhail Derzhavin as George.
Peter Lovesey's Victorian detective novel
Swing, Swing Together (1976), partly based on the book, featured as the second episode of the television series
Cribb (1980). In 2005 the comedians
Griff Rhys Jones,
Dara Ó Briain, and
Rory McGrath embarked on a recreation of the novel for what was to become a regular yearly
BBC TV series,
Three Men in a Boat. Their first expedition was along the Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford, recreating the original novel.
Theatre A stage adaptation earned
Jeremy Nicholas a
Best Newcomer in a Play nomination at the
1981 Laurence Olivier Awards. The book was adapted by
Clive Francis for a 2006 production that toured the UK.
Art A sculpture of a stylised boat was created in 1999 to commemorate
Three Men in a Boat on the
Millennium Green in
New Southgate, London, where the author lived as a child. In 2012 a mosaic of a dog's head was put onto the same Green to commemorate Montmorency.
Other works of literature In 1891,
Three Women in One Boat: A River Sketch by Constance MacEwen was published. This book relates the journey of three young university women who set out to emulate the river trip in
Three Men in a Boat in an effort to raise the spirits of one of them, who is about to be expelled from university. They bring a cat called Tintoretto in place of Montmorency.
P. G. Wodehouse mentions the Plaster of Paris trout in his 1910 novel
Psmith in the City. Psmith's boss, while delivering a political speech, pretends to have personally experienced a succession of men claiming to have caught a fake trout. Psmith interrupts the speech to "let him know that a man named Jerome had pinched his story." Three Men in a Boat is referenced in the 1956 parody novel on mountaineering,
The Ascent of Rum Doodle, where the head porter Bing is said to spend "much of his leisure immersed in a Yogistani translation of it." In
Have Space Suit—Will Travel, by
Robert A. Heinlein (1958), the main character's father is an obsessive fan of the book, and spends much of his spare time repeatedly re-reading it. The book
Three Men (Not) in a Boat: and Most of the Time Without a Dog (1983, republished 2011, Duckworth: ) by Timothy Finn is a loosely related novel about a walking trip. A re-creation in 1993 by poet
Kim Taplin and companions resulted in the travelogue
Three Women in a Boat. Another re-creation of Jerome's journey appeared in the same year.
Two and a Half Men in a Boat by novelist
Nigel Williams described the author's trip down the Thames accompanied by two friends (explorer JP and BBC executive
Alan) and Williams's dog Badger.
Gita sul Tevere (Tre uomini su un barcone in compagnia di un cane non proprio di razza) [A Trip on the Tiber (Three men on a boat with a not-so-purebred dog)]". () is an Italian humorous book inspired by this novel. Science fiction author
Connie Willis paid tribute to Jerome's novel in her own 1997
Hugo Award–winning book
To Say Nothing of the Dog. Her time-travelling protagonist also takes an ill-fated voyage on the Thames with two humans and a dog as companions, and encounters George, Harris, 'J' and Montmorency. The title of Willis's novel refers to the full title of the original book. "Three Men and a Sasquatch" was published in
Next Stop on the #13 in 2019.
Anne Youngson wrote
Three Women and a Boat (Penguin, 2021), about three middle-aged strangers setting off on an adventure in a
narrowboat. The novel was chosen for
BBC Radio 2 Book Club. In
L’amica geniale by
Elena Ferrante, a copy of
Tre uomini in barca by Jerome K. Jerome is awarded to protagonist Elena Greco as 4th prize for most frequent use of the local library. ==See also==