• A sexual scene in
Three Weeks inspired the
doggerel: ::
Would you like to sin ::
With Elinor Glyn ::
On a tiger skin? ::
Or would you prefer ::
To err with her ::
On some other fur? • The 1915 film ''Pimple's Three Weeks (Without the Option)'', starring British comedian
Fred Evans, is a burlesque of the novel. • In
S. J. Perelman's series of pieces
Cloudland Revisited, he re-reads and describes the
risqué novels that had thrilled him as a youth.
Tuberoses and Tigers deals with Glyn's
Three Weeks. Perelman described it as "servant-girl literature" and called Glyn's style "marshmallow". He also mentions the 1924 film version of the book in which he recalled Goldwyn's "seductive" image of Pringle "lolling on a tiger skin..." • In the 1924 silent movie
The Family Secret, the nurse maid for Baby Peggy's character reads the book to her as part of reading time, but Kerry sneaks away. • The 1925 silent movie
Seven Chances shows a telephone operator reading the book on the job between calls. • The 1930 Disney short
The Shindig shows
Clarabelle Cow reading the novel; as a result,
The Shindig was banned in Ohio. • In
Evelyn Waugh's 1952 novel
Men at Arms (the first of the
Sword of Honour trilogy), an (
RAF)
Air Marshal recites the poem upon spotting a polar bear rug by the fire in a London club, of which he has just wangled membership (p. 125). To this, another member responds: "Who the hell is Elinor Glyn?" The Air Marshal replies: "Oh, just a name, you know, put in to make it rhyme." This was both a snub to the Air Marshal and a literary snubbing of Glyn by Waugh. • The 1962 film adaptation of the musical
The Music Man has the librarian asking Mrs. Shinn if she wouldn't want her daughter reading a classic rather than Elinor Glyn. Mrs. Shinn replies that "What Elinor Glyn reads is her mother's problem." • The 1973 film
Blood for Dracula, directed by
Paul Morrissey, has the character Rubinia (a potential "bride" of the Count) mention that she is reading
Three Weeks. This is used as a subtle comedic touch, as the Count is searching for a virginal victim. • The 1977 British television series
Romance includes an episode based on
Three Weeks, adapted by Gerald Savory, directed by Waris Hussein, starring Elizabeth Shepherd and Simon MacCorkindale. ==References==