A
radio drama based on the story was broadcast on the
BBC Home Service on 14 October 1939. The radio drama starred
Cecil Trouncer as Uncle Fred and Philip Cunningham as Pongo. Other cast members included Ewart Scott as Wilberforce Robinson,
Ralph Truman as Claude Parker, Angela Kirk as Julia Parker,
Gladys Young as Connie Parker, and D.A. Clarke-Smith as Mr Roddis. A dramatization of "Uncle Fred Flits By" by
Christopher Sergel (under the pseudonym Perry Clark) was published in 1949 by Dramatic Publishing Co., Chicago. The American television series
Hollywood Opening Night adapted the story into the episode "Uncle Fred Flits By", which was originally broadcast 15 March 1953.
David Niven portrayed Uncle Fred, and
Robert Nichols portrayed Pongo. Among the other cast members were James Lilburn,
Dawn Addams,
Margaret Dumont,
Eric Snowden, and Mollie Glessing. Niven and Nichols also portrayed Uncle Fred and Pongo in a 1955 episode of
Four Star Playhouse that adapted "Uncle Fred Flits By", with
Norma Varden as Mrs Tarmigan (sic), Jennifer Raine as Julia, Leon Tyler as Robinson, Alex Frazer as Mr Tarmigan, and
Tudor Owen as Roddis. The story was adapted into a radio drama in 1955, broadcast on the BBC Home Service, with
D. A. Clarke-Smith as Uncle Fred,
Derek Hart as Pongo, Brian Haines as Wilberforce Robinson,
Alison Leggatt as Connie Parker, T. St. John Barry as Claude Parker, Joan Harrison as Julia Parker, and
Edward Jewesbury as Mr Roddis. Clarke-Smith had voiced Mr Roddis in the 1939 radio adaptation. The cast included
Avis Bunnage as Connie Parker, George Pensotti as Wilberforce Robinson,
Gordon Rollings as Claude Parker,
Janina Faye as Julia Parker, and
Ballard Berkeley as Mr Roddie. It was adapted in the first part of the six-part 1994 BBC radio adaptation of
Uncle Dynamite. The cast included
Richard Briers as Uncle Fred,
Hugh Grant as Pongo,
Paul Eddington as the narrator,
Jacqueline Tong as Connie, John Evitts as Claude,
Felicity Montagu as Julia, and David Howarth as Wilberforce. Actor
John Lithgow performs this story, along with
Ring Lardner's short story "
Haircut", in his one-man play titled
Stories by Heart (Broadway, 2018). ==See also==