The Devil in the White City (screen)2025-01-26T13:01:11-06:00


THE DEVIL IN THE WHITE CITY

plans for a screen adaptation

of Erik Larson’s book


Latest News

January 22, 2025: 20th Century Studios picks up The Devil in the White City as a feature film.

March 6, 2023: Hulu dropped plans to produce The Devil in the White City TV miniseries.

August 29, 2022: “According to a recent listing in Production Weekly, the series is reportedly scheduled to begin filming in March 2023 and will be filmed entirely in Chicago. Exact filming dates and locations have yet to be disclosed at this time.” [ReelChicago.com]

Development of Devil in the White City

A film adaptation of The Devil in the White City was first developed by Tom Cruise and Paula Wagner through their Cruise/Wagner company, but the option lapsed in 2004. Paramount acquired the film rights in 2007 and set it up with producers Michael Shamberg and Stacey Sher. Leonardo DiCaprio bought the film rights to The Devil in the White City in 2010 and began developing it as a feature film for Paramount studios to be directed by Martin Scorsese with DiCaprio was set to star in the leading role of the killer Holmes.

In 2019, the project changed to a big-budget miniseries for the streaming service Hulu.  The series is being produced by Paramount TV Studios, ABC Signature, and Appian Way. Hulu canceled their plans in March 2023, but ABC Signature remains committed to the drama and will be shopping the show to new outlets.

Credits

Cast

Producers

Writers

Directors

  • Todd Field reportedly will direct the first two episodes. (out 10/10/2022)

More Information

Internet Movie Database (IMDB) page for the miniseries The Devil in the White City

Posts about Erik Larson’s 2003 book, The Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America

A Room with a View … of Diana

In late November of 1892, Moses P. Handy moved into his new office inside the Administration Building on the Columbian Exposition fairgrounds in Jackson Park. As Chief of the Department of Publicity and Promotion, Handy had a staff of between four and forty-five, including local newspapermen Paul Hull and Sam V. Steele, both well-known among Chicago’s writers. The Chicago Times (November 29, 1892) reported on the move-in and on [...]

By |May 24th, 2021|Categories: REPRINTS|Tags: , , |0 Comments

June 9, 2021: “Chicago Encounters Japan: The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition” (online)

The Driehaus Museum in Chicago will offer an online program on “Chicago Encounters Japan: The 1893 World's Columbian Exposition” on Wednesday, June 9, 2021. Dr. Janice Katz, the Roger L. Weston Associate Curator of Japanese Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, will present on the history and legacy of Japanese Ho-o-den on the Wooded Island. Japan’s presence at the exposition of 1893 in Chicago was tactful, inspirational, and [...]

By |May 24th, 2021|Categories: EVENTS (past)|Tags: |0 Comments

Ida B. Wells documentary airs on WTTW-Chicago

Civil rights activist Ida B. Wells spoke truth to power through her pamphlet The Reason Why the Colored American Is Not in The World’s Columbian Exposition. 10,000 copies were distributed at the 1893 World’s Fair. “With the eyes of the world on Chicago,” explains a new documentary film about Wells, “she would use the international stage to expose the terror of lynching.” On Friday, May 21, 2021, Chicago public [...]

By |May 20th, 2021|Categories: NEWS, VIDEO|Tags: |0 Comments

Ballyhoo on the Midway Plaisance

“All new words are created because a new sound is needed to voice an idea, usually also new.” —Charles Wolverton The word ballyhoo, according to the renowned and authoritative Oxford English Dictionary (OED), means a “a showman’s touting speech, or a performance advertising a show.” It can be used as a mass noun to mean “bombastic nonsense; extravagant or brash publicity; noisy fuss.” Though this “carnival” usage has uncertain [...]

By |May 18th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

Feral Feline Fights for Food on the Fairgrounds

Several media outlets, including the Guardian and People, are reporting on Chicago’s use of feral cats to beat back our nationally recognized rat population. It’s old news. We’ve been relying on our feline friends since at least the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition. “Not many people are aware that the World’s Fair has a cat,” wrote the Chicago Tribune in September 1893. “This ignorance on the part of visitors is largely [...]

By |May 17th, 2021|Categories: REPRINTS|Tags: , , |0 Comments

118. Picturesque World’s Fair – The Great Steam Hammer

THE GREAT STEAM HAMMER.—One exhibit in the Transportation Building always attracted curious inspection. To many unfamiliar with the heavy machinery used in the vast manufactories of today, its use was not apparent, but to those informed in such fields it was an object of decided interest. This was the model of the monster steam hammer in use by the Bethlehem Iron Company, of Pennsylvania, the largest steam hammer in [...]

“Chicago’s White City Devil” on Smithsonian’s MURDEROUS HISTORY

The latest documentary about the evil doings of H. H. Holmes joins a crowded collection of films and television shows about the “devil in the white city” who killed an unknown number of victims around the time of the World’s Columbian Exposition. It is among the best to date. “Chicago's White City Devil,” the second episode of the Smithsonian Channel’s new series Murderous History, features rather cheesy dramatic scenes [...]

By |May 9th, 2021|Categories: NEWS, VIDEO|Tags: , |0 Comments

Prominent Petunias

On April 29, 1893, gardeners at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition held a christening ceremony for a pair of plants. Inside the greenhouse behind the Horticultural Building, they sprinkled water from a can onto the opening blossoms of two petunias, baptizing the large white bloom as “Mrs. Potter Palmer” (named after the President of the Board of Lady Managers) and the black one having one tiny white fleck as [...]

By |May 8th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , |0 Comments

Progress of the Century: The Celebrated Agave Plant of the 1893 World’s Fair

Uncle John rose with the morning sun on April 23, 1893 and made a bee-line for the Horticultural Building on the fairgrounds of the World’s Columbian Exposition in Jackson Park, Chicago. The opening of the Fair—when President Cleveland would push the button to unfurl the flags along the White City rooftops and release the water to the glorious fountains—was still nine days away. Today, however, the Chief of the [...]

By |May 7th, 2021|Categories: HISTORY|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

May 20, 2021: “Film Firsts and the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair: Part II” (online)

Chicago Movie Tours will offer the second of two free "mini matinee" online lectures on Thursday, May 20 at 9:30 AM. "Film Firsts and the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: Part II" promises to celebrate the fathers of modern movies and that time they filmed Chicago's famous Ferris wheel. To attend the event, just view their Facebook page at the scheduled time and click on the live video. [...]

By |May 6th, 2021|Categories: EVENTS (past)|0 Comments
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