*Several movies and miniseries have been made about Queen Victoria's life, including
Victoria and Albert, in which she is played by
Victoria Hamilton, Victoria the Great, and
Edward the Seventh, played by
Annette Crosbie. She figures centrally in films such as 1950's
The Mudlark, played by
Irene Dunne) and 1997's
Mrs. Brown (
Judi Dench. The German film
The Story of Vicky (Mädchenjahre einer Königin) (1954) plotted a highly fictionalised story about Queen Victoria's ascension to the throne and marriage to Prince Albert. The Queen was played by a sixteen-year-old
Romy Schneider.
*Victoria has been used in smaller roles as a kind of
deus ex machina character, sympathetically in
Shirley Temple's The Little Princess (1939), to surprise effect in
Billy Wilder's The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970), and comedically in
Gene Wilder's The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother (1975) and
Shanghai Knights (2003). In
From Hell (2001), she appears in a scene with her physician,
William Gull, who is suggested to be
Jack the Ripper. She also makes appearances in the 2004 version of
Around the World in Eighty Days (in the original 1956 production, a newspaper detailing Phileas Fogg's progress is taken to the Queen, and what is presumably the royal hand is seen eagerly taking it up), and in the 2004 anime movie
Steamboy, inaugurating
The Great Exhibition. The 1941
Nazi film
Ohm Krüger notoriously portrays her as a whisky-soaked drunk. Her daughter-in-law, the
Princess of Wales, reads a letter from Victoria to London Hospital governors, showing her concern for
John Merrick, in the 1980 film
The Elephant Man.
*In 1937
Lord Chamberlain the
Earl of Cromer ruled that no British sovereign may be portrayed on the British stage until 100 years after his or her accession. For this reason,
Laurence Housman’s play
Victoria Regina (1935), which had earlier appeared at the
Gate Theatre Studio in London with
Pamela Stanley in the title role, could not have its British premiere until the centenary of Queen Victoria's accession, 20 June 1937. This was a Sunday, so the new premiere took place the next day, at the
Lyric Theatre. Pamela Stanley reprised the title role at Housman's request, and
Carl Esmond played Prince Albert. The play later appeared on
Broadway, where
Helen Hayes portrayed the Queen, with
Vincent Price in the role of Prince Albert.
*
Monty Python's Flying Circus portrays Queen Victoria as a slapstick prankster and includes a sketch in which she says "We are not amused" in German accented English. Another Monty Python sketch contains a footrace in which all the contestants are dressed as Queen Victoria.
*In a series of sketches portraying the
Phantom Raspberry Blower, a cross between
Jack The Ripper and
The Phantom of the Opera, the
Two Ronnies dress an entire squad of policemen as Queen Victoria to act as body doubles for protection from the PRB.
*In the 2006 series of
Doctor Who, Queen Victoria appears in the episode "
Tooth and Claw", where she is played by
Pauline Collins. In the episode, set in 1879, she is threatened by a
werewolf that wants to infect her and take control of her empire. It is suggested that a scratch from the werewolf is the source of haemophilia in many of her descendants.
Rose Tyler makes a bet with the
Doctor for £10 that she can get the Queen to say "We are not amused."
At the episode's conclusion, she founds the
Torchwood Institute, an integral feature of the spin-off series
Torchwood, with various (fictional) speeches and proclamations by her available on the
Torchwood Institute website.
*The BBC series
Blackadder Goes Forth, set in
World War I, alludes humorously to Queen Victoria's heritage.
Captain Edmund Blackadder interrogates Captain
Kevin Darling whom he suspects to be a German spy. Captain Darling: "I'm as British as Queen Victoria!" Captain Blackadder: "So – your mother's German, your father's half German and you married a German?". She also appears in
Blackadder's Christmas Carol (1988), played by
Miriam Margolyes in a realistic-looking portrayal.
*The
Kinks honour Queen Victoria and her empire in their 1969 song "
Victoria". The song has since been covered by
The Fall, Cracker, and
Sonic Youth. Both The Kinks' and The Fall's versions were UK Top 40 hits.
*
Leonard Cohen refers to her in a mostly non-factual way in his 1964 poem "Queen Victoria and Me", and again in the 1972 song "Queen Victoria" (based on the poem). The song was later covered by
John Cale.
*
Queen Victoria's reign features in the
Paradox Interactive game,
Victoria, An Empire Under the Sun. In this game a player guides a country through
colonisation, the
Industrial Revolution, warfare and various historic events.
*In 2006, the Comics Sherpa online comic service started carrying a comic strip entitled
The New Adventures of Queen Victoria using cut-out photographs and portraits of the Queen and others.
*A 'Royal Diaries' book was written, documenting her childhood:
Victoria, May Blossom of Britannia England in 1829 by Anna Kirwan.
* After the release of the popular Victorian-era action film
Van Helsing, several members of the cast reunited to lend their voices to an animated prequel,
Van Helsing: The London Assignment. Queen Victoria and her royal physician, Dr. Henry Jekyll, are principal characters in the animated film.
* Queen Victoria invited
Martha Ann Ricks, on the behalf of Liberian Ambassador
Edward Wilmont Blyden, to Windsor Castle on
16 July 1892. Martha Ricks, a former slave from Tennessee, had saved her pennies for more than fifty years, to afford the voyage from
Liberia to England to see the Queen and thank the Queen for sending the British navy to patrol the coast of West Africa to prevent slavers from exporting Africans for the slave trade. Martha Ricks shook hands with the Queen and presented her with a Coffee Tree quilt, which Queen Victoria later sent to the
1893 World's Columbian Exposition for display. A mystery remains as to where the Coffee Tree quilt is today.
*
Emily Blunt has signed on to play Queen Victoria in the movie
The Young Victoria, which is scheduled for release in 2009. The film will be produced by
Martin Scorsese and
Graham King. The screenplay was written by
Julian Fellowes. It will revolve around the early years of Victoria's reign and her love affair with Prince Albert (
Rupert Friend). The role of Victoria's neurotic mother, the Duchess of Kent, is to be played by
Miranda Richardson.