Adaptations of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Poster from the 1880s

Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is an 1886 novella written by the Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson. It is about a London lawyer, Gabriel John Utterson, who investigates strange occurrences between his old friend, Dr. Henry Jekyll and the misanthropic Mr. Hyde. In a twist ending, it is revealed that Jekyll and Hyde were the same person, and that Jekyll had regularly transformed himself into Hyde by drinking a serum.

The work is known for its vivid portrayal of a split personality, and since the 1880s dozens of stage and film adaptations have been produced, although there have been no major adaptations to date that remain faithful to the narrative structure of Stevenson's original. Most omit the figure of Utterson, telling the story from Jekyll's and Hyde's viewpoint and often having them played by the same actor, thus eliminating the mystery aspect of the true identity of Hyde. Many adaptations also introduce a romantic element which does not exist in the original story.[1] While Hyde is portrayed in the novella as an evil-looking man of diminutive height, many adaptations have taken liberties with the character's physical appearance: Hyde is sometimes depicted with bestial or monstrous features, although sometimes he is more dashing and debonair than Jekyll, giving an alternate motivation for Jekyll to transform himself.

There are over 123 film versions, not including stage and radio, as well as a number of parodies and imitations.[2] Troy Howarth calls Stevenson's novella "the most filmed work of literature in the silent era."[3] Notable examples are listed below.

Direct adaptations

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Stage

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Playbill for Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1887)
  • 1887, a play in four acts. Thomas Russell Sullivan's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde opened in Boston in May 1887. The first serious theatrical rendering, it went on to tour Britain and ran for 20 years. It became forever linked with Richard Mansfield's performance; he continued playing the part until shortly before his death in 1907. Sullivan reworked the plot to centre around a domestic love interest.
  • 1888, a play in four acts. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was written by John McKinney in collaboration with the actor Daniel E. Bandmann. It opened at Niblo's Garden in March 1887 with Bandmann in the title role. Later that year it competed directly with Sullivan's 1887 adaptation, when both opened in London within days of each other.
  • 1897, a play in four acts. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Or a Mis-Spent Life was written by Luella Forepaugh and George F. Fish for the repertory company at Forepaugh's Family Theatre in Philadelphia, where it debuted in March 1897.[4] Published in 1904 by Samuel French, Inc. for use by other theatre companies.[5]
  • 1900, a play in four acts. Unproduced adaptation by Marcel Schwob and Vance Thompson.
  • 1990, musical U.S. Jekyll & Hyde. Music by Frank Wildhorn, book and lyrics by Leslie Bricusse. Originally conceived for the stage by Steve Cuden and Frank Wildhorn. This musical features the song "This Is The Moment".[6]
  • 1991, stage play, opened in London. Written by David Edgar for the Royal Shakespeare Company. The play is notable for its fidelity to the book's plot.
  • 1994, a musical for schools opened, Jekyll!, written by Alex Went, with music by John Moore, and directed by Peter Fanning. First performed at Shrewsbury School in 1994. The touring production at the 1995 Edinburgh Fringe was awarded a Fringe First for outstanding new drama.
  • 2009, a theatrical adaptation by playwright Jeffrey Hatcher, for the local Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park.
  • 2010, The Holden Kemble Theatre Company ran an adaptation titled The Scandalous Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde at the Edinburgh Festival and then a 312 week run at the Tabard Theatre in Chiswick, London.[7]
  • 2012, Synetic Theater ran a critically acclaimed silent adaptation of Jekyll & Hyde featuring Alex Mills as Jekyll/Hyde, Peter Pereyra as Lanyon, and Brittany O'Grady as the Fiancée.
  • 2012, new version by Jonathan Holloway workshopped and premiered at the Courtyard Theatre, London, featuring Melody Roche as Jekyll, Charlie Allen as Utterson and Gary Blair as Enfield.
  • 2013, a version of the story presented by Flipping the Bird at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, shows Jekyll as a woman, Dr. Tajemnica Jekyll, recently arrived in London from an unspecified foreign country, whose transformation to Edward Hyde came about as part of her desire to defy social boundaries. Utterson serves as her lover and lawyer, while she claims Hyde is her deformed nephew before admitting the truth.
  • 2022, an adaptation by Neil Bartlett staged at Derby Theatre. In this take on the story, Jekyll and Hyde are minor characters, with the focus being on Dr Stevenson, a new character who investigates Hyde's murders.[8]
  • 2022, an adaptation written and directed by Kip Williams for Sydney Theatre Company. The production featured two actors playing multiple characters, and incorporated a blend of live performance and live video projections, receiving a rare 5 star review from the Sydney Morning Herald.[9] The production subsequently toured to the Perth Festival and Adelaide Festival in 2023.
  • 2022-24, an adaptation by Gary McNair for solo performance, commissioned and first produced by Reading Rep Theatre in October 2022, with Audrey Brisson in the role of Gabriel John Utterson. The play was subsequently performed by Forbes Masson, directed by Michael Fentiman, at the Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh, between 13 and 27 January 2024.[10]
  • 2023, an adaptation by Jennifer Dick performed in the Glasgow Botanic Gardens for the Bard in the Botanics festival. In this version, Jekyll and Hyde are played by two individual actors.[11]

Film

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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1920)

Radio

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Television

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  • 1955, Season 1 episode of CBS's live CLIMAX! drama program Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde starring Michael Rennie. Hosted by Bill Lundigan, this episode was originally aired on 28 July 1955 (Season 1 Episode 34). It ran 60 minutes originally, but was edited down to 45 minutes on home video.[37] The story was adapted for television by Gore Vidal.[38]
  • 1968, TV U.S. and Canada, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Starring Jack Palance, directed by Charles Jarrott and produced by Dan Curtis of Dark Shadows fame. Nominated for several Emmy awards, it follows Hyde on sexual conquests and hack and slash murders, and gives a twist to the usual film ending when Jekyll-as-Hyde remains as Hyde following his being shot and killed. The TV-movie aired on CBC in Canada on 3 January 1968 and on ABC in the U.S. on 7 January.[39]
  • 1973, TV U.S. and U.K., Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a musical made-for-TV version starring Kirk Douglas. No relation to the later musical version, the songs for this one were by Lionel Bart. Directed by David Winters.
  • 1980, TV U.K., Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a BBC adaptation directed by Alastair Reid with David Hemmings in the title roles. This version turns the convention of the (performed) role upside down, with Hemmings appearing in heavy make-up as Jekyll, and with less makeup as a debonair, man-about-town version of Hyde. This version also gives a twist to the usual film ending when Jekyll's body remains as Hyde following his suicide.
  • 1986, animated Australian telefilm, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, with Max Meldrum as Jekyll, David Nettheim as Hyde and John Ewart as Utterson, made by the Burbank production company. This version is notable for being the only animated adaptation of the story.
  • 1989, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, TV U.S., with Laura Dern and Anthony Andrews in the dual role. This version was adapted by J. Michael Straczynski. Broadcast as episode 3 of the horror anthology series Nightmare Classics.
  • 1990, TV UK, Jekyll & Hyde, a made-for-television film starring Michael Caine in the title roles. Added to the story is the character of Jekyll's sister-in-law Sara Crawford (played by Cheryl Ladd), who is raped by Hyde.
  • 2002, TV U.K., Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde starring John Hannah as both characters, with body language and wardrobe the only distinction between the appearance of the two. Initially Hyde is identified as a mental patient that Jekyll had 'hired' as a test subject, but when Hyde died during a riot in the asylum, Jekyll used Hyde's name for his other identity as his staff were already expecting Hyde as a new presence in the house. The narrative is chronologically disjointed, beginning with the end of the story, then returning to the beginning via narrated flashbacks, with the occasional brief glimpse of the reading of Jekyll's confession by Utterson.
  • 2008, TV, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, starring Dougray Scott, Tom Skerritt, and Krista Bridges.
  • 2015, TV, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, starring Gianni Capaldi, Shaun Paul Piccinino and Mickey Rooney in his final role.[40]

Books

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  • 2001, Ludovic Debeurme's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, an illustrated edition adapted for young readers.

Comics

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  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, adaptation by Lorenzo Mattotti and Jerry Kramsky which won the Eisner Award for Best U.S. Edition of Foreign Material in 2003.
  • A condensed version of the story was adapted in 1982 as a short comic book titled Przeobrażenie (The Transformation), by Polish illustrator Marek Szyszko, with Stefan Weinfeld. In 1983 Szyszko and Weinfeld adapted the story once again, this time as a full-length comic book Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde, which closely followed Stevenson's complete story and kept its title.
  • A Disney comics parody of the story first published in Topolino in 2014, titled The Strange Case of Dr. Ratkyll and Mr. Hyde, casts Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck in the respective title roles, with Mickey physically transforming into Donald throughout the story.

Video games

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  • 1988, video game, Dr. Jekyll and Mr Hyde for the NES, created by Toho.
  • 2001, adventure game, Jekyll and Hyde for Windows platform, developed by In Utero and published by Cryo Interactive.
  • 2010, hidden object game, The Mysterious Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde for various platforms, developed by Mad Data Games.[41][42]
  • 2010, adventure game, Jekyll and Hyde for Windows platform, developed by Pixelcage GmbH.[43]
  • In 2018, a dating simulator created by game company NTT Solmare titled Guard Me, Sherlock has a version of Jekyll and Hyde; however, in this adaptation they are not the same person and are instead brothers, Jekyll being the elder, and unlike many other adaptations, Hyde is not depicted as monstrous and instead appears as a normal brown-haired, blue-eyed male with a scar across his face.[citation needed]
  • In 2020, Korean gaming company Growing Seeds released MazM: Jekyll and Hyde as part of a series of games.[44] It stays remarkably close to the book, while providing informations about British society at the time, giving some context regarding customs, morals, ethics, work, interests, social classes, politics and such.

Re-tellings

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Film

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Television

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  • 1959, TV France, The Doctor's Horrible Experiment. A modern adaptation of Stevenson's novel, it stars Jean-Louis Barrault, Teddy Bilis, and Michel Vitold.
  • Julia Jekyll and Harriet Hyde, a 1995 British children's television series which aired on BBC One
  • 1999, TV U.S., Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde starring Adam Baldwin. In this modern-day re-imagining, plastic surgeon Henry Jekyll learns ancient Chinese herbal medicine will give him superhuman powers, which he uses to exact revenge for his wife's murder. Francis Ford Coppola produced.
  • 2015, South Korean television romance-thriller series, Hyde Jekyll, Me, starring Hyun Bin as both Hyde and Jekyll, renamed Seo-jin and Robin. In this version, Hyde is the main personality, while Jekyll is the new personality created by an accident.

Radio

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  • 2012, BBC Radio Scotland crime drama, The Strange Case of Dr. Hyde, a four-part reworking of the Stevenson story written by Chris Dolan set in modern-day Edinburgh. Detective Inspector Newman (David Rintoul), assisted by Detective Constable Lanyon (Kenny Blyth), is investigating a series of mutilation murders and seeks the help of eccentric pathologist Dr. Hyde (Jimmy Chisholm), becoming involved along the way with solicitor Jane Poole (Wendy Seager).

Books

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  • 1890, The Untold Sequel of the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Frances H. Little is a re-telling of the story based on the idea that Edward Hyde was an actual person, a former actor whom Jekyll had met in America and brought to London, and not the alter ego of Henry Jekyll.[45]
  • 1979, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Holmes by Loren D. Estleman is a retelling of the story based on the idea that Utterson hired Sherlock Holmes to investigate Hyde's connection to Jekyll in the belief that Hyde is a blackmailer.
  • The 1996 Robert Swindells novel Jacqueline Hyde concerns the protagonist's struggle with her 'Hyde' after smelling a bottle, the contents of which releases her bad side.
  • Jekyll and Heidi, a 1999 book in the Goosebumps series.
  • The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mademoiselle Odile, a 2012 YA novel by James Reese features a young Cagot witch named Odile Ricau who brews a salt potion to save her brother but accidentally lets it fall into the hands of a young Dr. Jekyll, who uses the salts and potion to change into Mister Hyde for the first time. Serves as an origin story for Jekyll and Hyde and as a prequel to the story.
  • 2023, My Dear Henry: A Jekyll & Hyde Remix by Kalynn Bayron is a retelling of the story in which the characters are black university students. It also deals with themes of homosexuality during the time period of the novel. Henry Jekyll becomes Hyde via a potion created by his father Dr. Jekyll in order to remove his feelings for Gabriel.[46]

Story from alternate viewpoints

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  • 1990, novel, Mary Reilly by Valerie Martin, a reworking of Stevenson's plot told from the viewpoint of a maid in Jekyll's household, named Mary Reilly in this novel.
  • 1996, film U.S., Mary Reilly. Starring Julia Roberts and John Malkovich and based on the 1990 novel.
  • 2014, the novel Hyde by Daniel Levine tells the story from Hyde's perspective and adds new elements to the plot.

Sequels

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Film

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  • 1951, film U.S., The Son of Dr. Jekyll. Dr. Jekyll's illegitimate son Edward tries to recreate his father's formula to clear his father's name.
  • 1957, film U.S., The Daughter of Dr. Jekyll. A young woman discovers she is the daughter of Dr. Jekyll. This low-budget adaptation includes the bizarre and unique feature of Mr. Hyde as a "human werewolf", who can only be destroyed by a stake through the heart, which is the traditional way of killing vampires, not werewolves.
  • 1959, film U.K., The Ugly Duckling. A comedy film and the first of three adaptations of the story by Hammer Film Productions. It has nothing to do with the story of "The Ugly Duckling", despite its name. The film is about a modern-day Henry Jekyll who is a great-grandson of the original Dr. Jekyll, and discovers his great-grandfather's formula.
  • Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde, 1995 comedy film starring Tim Daly, Sean Young and Lysette Anthony, in which a descendant of Dr. Jekyll creates a variant of his ancestor's potion that turns him into a woman.
  • Doctor Jekyll, a 2023 film starring Eddie Izzard as the granddaughter of Henry Jekyll, and directed by Joe Stephenson.

Television

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Books

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  • In The Jekyll Legacy, a 1990 novel by Robert Bloch and Andre Norton Hester Lane, a reporter from Canada, discovers that she is Jekyll's niece and heir. However, someone is continuing Jekyll's experiments. The novel takes an even more sinister turn as Jekyll's butler Poole and Utterson are bludgeoned to death.
  • 2021, Jekyll and Hyde: Resurrection by Alexander Bayliss was released on 5 January to commemorate the 135th anniversary of the publication of the original. It is a contemporary urban thriller in which a modern-day descendant of Dr. Jekyll discovers his ancestor's old formula.

Spoofs and parodies

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Dr. Pyckle and Mr. Pryde (1924)
  • Dr. Pyckle and Mr. Pryde, a 1924 silent, black-and-white comedy film starring Stan Laurel in a solo film appearance and directed by Percy Pembroke. A parody in which the Hyde character Mr. Pride is more of a compulsive prankster than evil.
  • The Impatient Patient, a 1942 Looney Tunes Daffy Duck cartoon where, suffering from hiccups, he ends up meeting a Dr. Jerkyl while trying to deliver a telegram to someone named "Chloe".
  • Mighty Mouse Meets Jekyll and Hyde Cat, a 1944 Mighty Mouse cartoon.
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Mouse, a 1947 Tom and Jerry cartoon.
  • Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a 1953 horror comedy film starring the comedy team of Abbott and Costello and Boris Karloff as Jekyll, with an uncredited Eddie Parker as (Karloff's stuntman) as Mr. Hyde.
  • Dr. Jerkyl's Hide, a 1954 Looney Tunes cartoon featuring Sylvester the Cat, bulldog Alfie and terrier Chester, with Sylvester as the dual character.
  • Hyde and Hare, a 1955 Looney Tunes Bugs Bunny cartoon.
  • Hyde and Go Tweet, a 1960 Looney Tunes cartoon featuring Sylvester and Tweety, with the bird as the dual character.
  • And Then There Were None, 1966 episode of Gilligan's Island featuring Gilligan as Dr. Gilligan, an Oscar Wilde-style Victorian doctor who transforms into a monster at the mention of food.
  • The Adult Version of Jekyll & Hide, 1972 "underground" erotic film starring John Barnum as "Dr. Leeder" who finds and uses Jekyll's diary and formula, turning him into "Miss Hyde" (Jane Tsentas)
  • Dottor Jekyll e gentile signora, 1980 Italian comedy film starring Paolo Villaggio and Edwige Fenech
  • Jekyll and Hyde... Together Again, 1982, a campy satire with Mark Blankfield as Jekyll who experiments with a "drug to replace all surgery", which is inadvertently mixed with an unknown substance.
  • Wondergran Meets Dr. Jackal and Mr. Hide, on the first episode of Season 12 of The Benny Hill Show. Produced in 1981, Benny Hill is surgeon Dr. Jackal who, unable to have a proper meal and drinking a mix of chemicals to assuage his hunger, changes into the evil monster Mr. Hide.
  • "Dr. Jekyll & Mr. McDuck", 1987 episode of Disney's DuckTales
  • Dr. Jerkoff and Mr. Hard, a 1997 Direct-to-Video gay pornographic film starring Jim Buck as "Dr. Jerkoff/Mr. Hard"
  • Dr Jekyll i Mr Hyde według Wytwórni A'YoY – Polish movie from 1999
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mistress Hyde, 2003 direct-to-DVD erotic film starring Julian Wells as "Dr. Jackie Stevenson/Heidi Hyde"
  • "The Strange Case of Dr. Jiggle and Mr. Sly", which appeared as part of the VeggieTales 2004 video A Snoodle's Tale
  • Jacqueline Hyde, 2005 direct-to-DVD erotic film starring Gabriella Hall as the normal "Jackie Hyde" and Blythe Metz as her "Jacqueline Hyde" counterpart
  • In the Rooster Teeth Animation RWBY, the book "The Man with Two Souls." Is a reference to the book. A sequel is called "The Man with Two Souls II: The Man with Four Souls."
  • Jekyll & Hyde, 2016 stage show portraying a camp interpretation of the story. The show was created and performed by New Zealand group A Slightly Isolated Dog.[48]
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  • Mad Monster Party?, a 1967 American animated comedy film, features Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as guests at a party thrown by Baron Boris von Frankenstein.
  • "Nowhere to Hyde," the 12 September 1970, episode of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! in which the ghost of Mr. Hyde is committing jewelry store robberies and one of the suspects is a descendant of Dr. Jekyll.
  • Mad Mad Mad Monsters, a 1972 American animated "prequel of sorts" to Mad Monster Party?. Dr. Jekyll appears only twice briefly in the story and is not mentioned by name until the second time at the end, where he drinks his potion and changes into Mr. Hyde.
  • 1972, film Spain, Dr. Jekyll y el Hombre Lobo, a Paul Naschy film in his long-running series that pits Dr. Jekyll against a werewolf.
  • 1975, TV U.S., The Ghost Busters, a Filmation series featuring ghosts of historical and literary figures. In the episode "Jekyll & Hyde: Together for the First Time!", Severn Darden stars as Jekyll alongside Joe E. Ross as Mr. Hyde.
  • Scooby-Doo! and the Reluctant Werewolf, a 1988 comedy film, features a race between a number of classic Hollywood inspired monsters including "Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Snyde."
  • 1993, animated film, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Mr. Hyde appears as one of the citizens of Halloween Town. Only seen in his "Hyde" form, he keeps two smaller versions of himself underneath his hat.
  • 1994, film U.S., The Pagemaster, a mix of animation and live action, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde appear as the movie's first villain (voiced by Leonard Nimoy).
  • 2003, film The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, adapted from Alan Moore's eponymous comic book series. The film adaptation stars Jason Flemyng as both Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the latter using prosthetic makeup. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are employed by the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen to combat the Fantom. The version of Hyde depicted in both comic and movie bears more resemblance to the Hulk than the malevolent dwarf of the novel, possessing great strength and size. As in the comic book on which it is based, this is attributed to Hyde "growing, free from boundaries, free from limitations" (although the film version is still dependent on Jekyll drinking the serum to transform, rather than Hyde no longer requiring the potion to manifest).
  • 2004, film Van Helsing. Robbie Coltrane provides the voice of a CGI animated Mr. Hyde, whom Van Helsing unintentionally kills at the Cathedral of Notre Dame when pursuing him through Paris. Like in The League of Extraordinary Gentleman, Mr. Hyde is portrayed as a large, hulking brute. When Hyde dies, he transforms back into Dr. Jekyll. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is also the focus of the film's animated prequel Van Helsing: The London Assignment, where Hyde is shown as Jack the Ripper, stealing souls each night for a youth potion that Jekyll, in the guise of a royal physician, uses to restore Queen Victoria's youth and seduce her.
  • 2008, film U.S., Igor. Jaclyn (Jennifer Coolidge) stars as the henchwoman of Dr. Schadenfreude (Eddie Izzard), turning into Heidi to spy on Schadenfreude's competition.
  • The Phineas and Ferb episode "The Monster of Phineas-n-Ferbenstein" features the villain Dr. Jekyll Doofenshmirtz drinking a potion to turn himself into a monster in order to win a "Best Monster" contest.
  • 2012, Sony Pictures animated film, Hotel Transylvania, Mr. Hyde can be seen as one of the monsters in Hotel Transylvania. This version has an underbite, has pale yellow skin, and wears a suit and a top hat.
  • 2014, In Fate/Prototype: Fragments of Blue & Silver, a light novel series based on the original drafts of Fate/stay night, Dr. Jekyll appears as the Servant of the Berserker class, portrayed as a gentle and good looking young man. His Noble Phantasm allows him to transform into Mr. Hyde.
  • The Glass Scientists,[49] 2015 webcomic adaptation by Sage Cotugno, features Hyde constantly at odds with Dr. Jekyll's pursuit of improving the reputation of mad scientists in the public eye, who are generally ostracized following the death of the infamous Dr. Frankenstein. Lanyon plays a greater role in this adaptation, acting as Jekyll's business partner and taking up Utterson's role in the original novel as Jekyll's close friend. The webcomic is ongoing.
  • 2016, TV U.S., Once Upon a Time seasons 5 and 6, with Hank Harris as Dr. Jekyll and Sam Witwer as Mr. Hyde. In this version, Rumplestiltskin helps Dr. Jekyll to create his formula, hoping to benefit from Dr. Jekyll's work. Dr. Jekyll still has evil tendencies at times, and Hyde can be nice. The characters are separate and appear in the present day.
  • 2016, TV U.K., Penny Dreadful season 3, with Shazad Latif as Dr. Henry Jekyll. Here, Jekyll is an old medical school friend of Victor Frankenstein's, who once schemed with him to upend the medical establishment. He comes to Victor's aid after the latter has lost control of his creations.
  • In 2017, Russell Crowe plays Dr. Jekyll (and Mr. Hyde) in The Mummy, which is the first installment in the Dark Universe film series and is a role which was planned to be elaborated on in further films within the series similar to Marvel. However due the film’s poor performance, the cancellation of the so-called Dark Universe put a stop to these plans.
  • The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter (2017) by Theodora Goss is the first novel of the Athena Club series, which features the daughters of various prominent scientists from Victorian literature banding together to oppose their fathers' schemes. The first members of the club are Mary Jekyll, Doctor Jekyll's legitimate daughter, and the near-feral Diana Hyde, with the first novel seeing these two meeting their fellows and confronting the still-living Edward Hyde.

Similar stories

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Der Januskopf (1920)
The Nutty Professor (1963)
  • 1920, film Germany, Der Januskopf (literally, The Janus-Head, Janus being a Roman God depicted with two faces). Directed by F. W. Murnau. An unauthorized version of Stevenson's story, disguised by changing the names to Dr. Warren and Mr. O'Connor. The dual roles were essayed by Conrad Veidt, with an early role for Bela Lugosi, who plays the equivalent of Mr. Poole, Jekyll's butler. The film is now lost.
  • Motor Mania, a 1950 Goofy cartoon in which he transforms into a Mr. Hyde-type split personality.
  • Sicque! Sicque! Sicque!, the ninth episode of The Inspector animated film series. It was produced in 1966 and features Deux-Deux drinking a green potion from a test tube and constantly changing into a huge, ugly, green monster when the Inspector is not looking. The monster Deux-Deux becomes keeps shooting and stomping on the Inspector.
  • 1963, film U.S., The Nutty Professor. Directed by Jerry Lewis. This comedy film retains a thin connection to the original.
  • In the "1970 Parallel Time" storyline (March 27, 1970 - July 17, 1970) of the ABC daytime serial Dark Shadows, Dr. Cyrus Longworth (played by Christopher Pennock) creates a formula that turns him into the dark-haired, mustachioed and evil "John Yaeger" (also played by Pennock).
  • 1981, film India, Chehre Pe Chehra (lit. 'A face over a face') is an Indian Bollywood thriller film produced and directed by Raj Tilak. It stars Sanjeev Kumar as Dr. Wilson / Blackstone.
  • "Nasty Stuff", 1986 episode of claymation series The Trap Door in which Berk makes a headache cure which turns him into a monstrous version of himself.
  • 2013, TV U.S., Do No Harm, an NBC series. This is a contemporary take on the story, with actor Steven Pasquale in dual roles as Dr. Jason Cole/Ian Price. Cole is a successful neurosurgeon who has long been able to suppress Price, his evil alternate personality, with an experimental drug. However, Price develops an immunity to the drug and subsequently wreaks havoc on Cole's life when he is in control.
  • The Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero episode "Rip-Penn" features Penn as Dr. Barzelby (inspired by Dr. Jekyll) who accidentally drinks a potion that turns him into a monster version of Penn's nemesis Rippen.

Other cultural references

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  • The Prize Pest, a 1951 Looney Tunes Daffy Duck and Porky Pig cartoon where Daffy adopts a "Jekyll and Hyde routine" split personality in order to scare Porky Pig.
  • In season 10 of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, the serial killer Charles DiMesa a.k.a. Dr. Jekyll is active.
  • In Power Rangers Dino Super Charge, the name of the character Heckyl refers to Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde because he has a split personality and shares a body with Snide.
  • 2010, television series, Sanctuary, the character Adam Worth's story was stolen by a former friend and retold under the "fictional" title of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Adam's psychological disorder is one of "split personality" at a time before modern psychiatry.

Music

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The following songs and albums make reference to the novel:

See also

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  • Hulk - subsequent comics and media
  • Two-Face - subsequent comics and media

References

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  1. ^ Campbell, James (12 December 2008). "The Beast Within". The Guardian.
  2. ^ "Derivative Works - Robert Louis Stevenson". www.robert-louis-stevenson.org.
  3. ^ a b Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  4. ^ "Last Night's Bills at the Theatres: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde at Forepaugh's". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 16 March 1897. p. 5 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ Rose, Brian A. (1996). Jekyll and Hyde Adapted: Dramatizations of Cultural Anxiety. Contributions in Drama and Theatre Studies. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-313-29721-5.
  6. ^ Jones, Kenneth (5 January 2001). "Jekyll & Hyde's Moment on Broadway Ends Jan. 7". Playbill.com. Archived from the original on 16 October 2012.
  7. ^ "Welcome to The Tabard Theatre". www.tabardweb.co.uk.
  8. ^ "Jekyll and Hyde review – #MeToo transformation explores monstrous masculinity | Theatre | The Guardian". amp.theguardian.com. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  9. ^ "REVIEW: 'We sit spellbound': Five stars for STC's new Jekyll and Hyde". 11 August 2022.
  10. ^ Jekyll & Hyde theatre programme, Royal Lyceum Theatre Company Ltd., Edinburgh, January 2024
  11. ^ Fisher, Mark (17 July 2023). "Jekyll and Hyde review – Shakespearean style shows another side to Stevenson thriller". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  12. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). "Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era". Midnight Marquee Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  13. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). "Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era". Midnight Marquee Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  14. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). "Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era". Midnight Marquee Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  15. ^ Kinnard, Roy (1995). "Horror in Silent Films". McFarland and Company Inc. ISBN 0-7864-0036-6. Page 34.
  16. ^ Workman, Christopher; Howarth, Troy (2016). Tome of Terror: Horror Films of the Silent Era. Midnight Marquee Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-1936168-68-2.
  17. ^ Victoria Jackson, "The Distribution and Exhibition of Kinemacolor in the UK and the USA 1909–1916" (University of Bristol, 2011).
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