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The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy as international phenomenon

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The cover of the 2005 Romanian translation of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, in an omnibus edition.

Within a couple of years after the original 1978 radio broadcasts in the UK, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy became a large international phenomenon. The original radio episodes have been broadcast in English, worldwide, and have been translated and adapted anew for radio in non-English speaking countries. The TV series, similarly, has also been broadcast worldwide (in English, in some instances with subtitles, or redubbed into a new language). CDs of the original or locally-adapted radio series are available worldwide, as are VHS tapes and DVDs of the TV series.

The books, as of 2005, have been translated into more than thirty languages, including Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Swedish, Spanish, Turkish and Ukrainian. However, despite the wide translations, several of these editions have gone out of print (editions in Japanese, Portuguese and Italian are out of print as of July 2005). The German and French editions have remained readily available, and the Dutch and Spanish paperback editions of the first novel, like their counterparts published in France, the USA and the United Kingdom, have been reprinted with a "movie tie-in" cover, replicating art off of the movie's poster. The "movie tie-in" editions published in the UK, USA and Spain, in addition to the full text of the novel, contain an essay by one of the film's producers, and interviews with members of the cast and the screenwriter, whereas the Dutch "movie tie-in" edition has none of these, but instead has a printed preview of the second novel in the series.

The 2005 movie was also scheduled for worldwide release, opening first in the United Kingdom and Australia, then the United States and Canada a day later, and covering most of the rest of the world through the summer of 2005. DVDs of the movie will follow a similar release pattern, starting with the United Kingdom, the USA and Canada in September 2005.

Contents

[edit] Early international exposure

Many science fiction fans and radio listeners outside of the United Kingdom were first exposed to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy in one of two ways: shortwave radio broadcasts of the original radio series, or by Douglas Adams being "Guest of Honour" at the 1979 World Science Fiction Convention, Seacon, held in Brighton, England, UK. It was there that the radio series was nominated for a Hugo Award (the first radio series to receive a nomination) but lost to Superman: The Movie. A convention exclusively for H2G2, Hitchercon I, was held in Glasgow, Scotland, UK, in September 1980, the year that the official fan club, ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha, was organized. In the early 1980s, versions of H2G2 became available in the USA, Canada, Germany, Sweden and Finland.

[edit] Finland

The five books have been published in Finland as follows:

A Finnish radio adaptation of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Primary and Secondary Phases was broadcast in 1984. The third and fourth books were adapted in a six part radio series, featuring the same cast, in 1991, and a seven part adaptation of the final book was broadcast in 1995.

[edit] France

The cover of a French paperback translation, printed in 2005, of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

The five books have been published in France as follows:

The first French edition of the book was published as Le guide du routard galactique, which was a literal translation of the original English title. However, the French publisher, Denoël, was threatened with legal action by the publishers of a non-fiction travel guide entitled Le guide du routard.

A French radio adaptation, drawn from the 12 radio scripts of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Primary and Secondary Phases was broadcast in 1995. There's also an A-Z "Guide to the Guide" available, written by Jean Bonnefoy.

Notable in the French adaptation are slight changes in the names of the main characters. Thus Arthur Dent becomes "Arthur Accroc", Ford Prefect becomes "Ford Escort", Zaphod Beeblebrox becomes "Zappy Bibicy", and Slartibartfast becomes "Saloprilopette". Trillian, Eddie and Marvin have the same names.

[edit] Germany

The cover of a German paperback translation, printed in 1990, of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

The five books have been published in Germany as follows:

Unlike the French translations, many of the main characters in the German language printed editions have exactly the same names (and spellings) as the original English printed editions. After the publication of the first novel in Germany (the first translation of H2G2), a German adaptation of the first six radio episodes was recorded, entitled Per Anhalter ins All. This was a co-production of Bayerischer Rundfunk, Südwestfunk (now Südwestrundfunk) and Westdeutscher Rundfunk, and the series was first transmitted in 1981 and 1982. The six episodes were translated by Benjamin Schwartz, who also translated the first four novels, and the series is available on CD. This first series uses complete and uncut versions of the radio episode scripts as its basis. Material in the English Edition script book, as well as Don't Panic, indicated as being cut or left out of the original BBC performances, is included in the German episodes. Because of the inclusion of this material, the first six BBC radio episodes were actually transmitted on radio in Germany in twelve parts. The CDs of the first series, as released in 2003 and 2005, contain all of the material for a single original BBC episode on each of six discs, but do not include the announcements read at the conclusion of each episode.

A second radio series, Per Anhalter ins All 2, adapted from the third and fourth novels by Walter Andreas Schwarz and comprising seventeen episodes, followed in 1990-91. The adaptation of Life, the Universe and Everything starts with episode thirteen, and ends partway through episode twenty-two. The adaptation of So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish begins with the conclusion to episode twenty-two and ends with episode twenty-nine. This adaptation was not as popular with fans in Germany (reportedly due to most of the original cast not returning to record the second series).<ref>Simpson, M. J. (2005). The Pocket Essential Hitchhiker's Guide, Second Edition. Pocket Essentials. 1-904048-46-3.</ref> CD sets of the 1981-82 and 1990-91 radio adaptations were re-released in 2005 with cover art that ties in to the 2005 movie release, and retitled Per Anhalter durch die Galaxis. [Per Anhalter ins All means, roughly, "hitchhiking in space" and Per Anhalter durch die Galaxis means, roughly, "hitchhiking through the galaxy."] The LP adaptations were also made available in 1990 and 1991. Adams travelled at least once to Germany, giving readings from his Hitchhiker's novels in 1994, and these were available as "Douglas Adams Live" on CD.

A one man show, consisting of Axel Pape, was performed at the Comedia Colonia in February 1987. An adaptation with a full cast was staged in Berlin in December 1987.<ref>Photographs from a 1987 stage adaptation in Berlin</ref> Another adaptation was staged at Brechtbau in February 2000, and again in Freiburg in May 2000.

The six TV series episodes are available in a 2 DVD set in Germany, packaged in a replica of the prop used as the "outer case enclosure" for the TV series' Guide prop. An audiobook version of the short story Young Zaphod Plays it Safe was released as Der junge Zaphod geht auf Nummer sicher on a 30 minute CD, read by Boris Aljinovic, in May 2005. The 2005 movie was released on DVD in Germany in October 2005.

[edit] Italy

The five books have been published in Italy as follows:

The collection of Douglas Adams' sketches and notes The Salmon of Doubt was also published with the title Il salmone del dubbio by Arnoldo Mondadori Editore in 2002, translated by Laura Serra.

The five books of the "trilogy" have been reprinted several times by the same publisher, and are still in print.

The Italian translation of the book titles strictly follows the original ones. The main characters of the novels have the same names as in English; on the other hand, the names of some objects and planets have been adapted in order to retain their original meaning and/or feeling, rather than the English pronunciation. For example, the Zap-O-Matic Gun is called in Italian Fucile Crepaben (Die-Well-Gun). Curiously enough, the Italian name of the living mattresses from Squornshellous Zeta is not Zem, but Rollo.

[edit] The Netherlands

The cover of a Dutch "movie tie-in" paperback translation, printed in 2005, of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

Around 1980 Vincent van Engelen and Martin Cleaver made a 225 minute-long Dutch adaptation of the radio play. It was originally broadcast by the KRO and had the name 't Transgalactisch Liftershandboek.

All five novels were first translated and published starting in 1981 and retranslated and reprinted in 2004-2005 (Arthur Dent was originally known as Hugo Veld in the Dutch translation and Ford Prefect as Amro Bank). In 2004, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy was reprinted with a new cover that would have linked the artwork across all five books, but this was withdrawn and printed again with a movie tie-in cover. Each book in the series (except for the first in its movie tie-in edition) bears the legend "Part [1-5] in a trilogy of five parts."

The books in the series were translated as:

[edit] Poland

The five books in the series were first published in Poland from 1994-1996 by the "Zysk i S-ka" company. A reprint of the first three books were released in 2005 and 2006 by the "Albatros" publishing house.

The books in the series were translated as:

There is no radio adaptation of the series in Polish. The reprints of the fourth and the fifth book are said to be published later this year.

[edit] Romania

The five books in the series were translated into Romanian for the first time in 2005. The five books were sold individually, and are also sold in an omnibus edition. The books were translated by Eugen Dumitrescu and published by Nemira Grup Editorial. The omnibus edition, a paperback, also contains a translation of the "Guide to the Guide" written and revised by Adams in the mid-1980s. An English version of the text appears in The Hitchhiker's Quartet. The final paragraph about the Infocom game and the Hitchhiker's script book is omitted, however the phone number for NASA in the included translation of "How to Leave the Planet" has been updated for their new area code.

The books in the series were translated as:

[edit] Spanish

The cover of the Spanish language edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

For Spain and the Latin American market the first five books are published by Anagrama in their Spanish translations by Benito Gómez Ibáñez.

[edit] Sweden

In Sweden, the national radio company staged a translation of the radio series in the summers of 1987 (episodes 1-6) and 1988 (reruns of episodes 1-6, and then episodes 7-12).

The five books in the series have been translated as follows:

[edit] USA

The cover of the first US edition of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, from a 2004 anniversary reproduction.

Harmony Books published the first Hitchhiker's novel as a hardback in October 1980. A few months after this, in March 1981, the original radio series was first broadcast on NPR. In August 1981, Pocket Books placed an ad in an issue of Rolling Stone, which gave away 3,000 copies of the first US paperback edition. A repeat of the radio series was broadcast by NPR in September, and the paperback edition was released to the public in October. Douglas Adams began making trips to the USA in 1981, to promote his books, and to first discuss a US adaptation of the TV series in 1981, and later a Hollywood movie adaptation of the story (his first trip to Hollywood, and his first attempt at making a movie version of The Hitchhiker's Guide were in 1983).

In September 1982, Adams appeared at Chicon IV, that year's Worldcon, held in Chicago, Illinois, USA from 2-6 September. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe was published in the USA in October 1982, followed by the TV series appearing on PBS stations in November 1982. Life, the Universe and Everything was published in the USA in 1983. The first ever omnibus (multiple volume) printing, entitled The Hitchhiker's Trilogy and containing the US editions of the first three novels, appeared in 1983. After the release of Life, the Universe and Everything, Adams had three bestselling novels on the lists of both Publishers Weekly and The New York Times.

Infocom launched their "interactive fiction" version in October 1984, in New York City, a month before So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish was published, simultaneously on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, for the first time. The computer game was also promoted at Comdex in Las Vegas, Nevada, and the radio series was re-transmitted on NPR, to create further publicity. Adams himself toured the USA to promote both the computer game and the fourth novel, including an appearance on Late Night with David Letterman.

A new omnibus edition, The Hitchhiker's Quartet, was published in 1986. Abridged audiobook versions of all four novels were published in the early 1980s, read by Stephen Moore, who played Marvin (among other roles) in the original radio series. Copies of the LP adaptations were also released in the USA and Canada, first by Hannibal Records, and later by Simon and Schuster as part of their Audioworks series. Cassettes of the actual radio episodes first appeared in 1989.

Mostly Harmless was published simultaneously in the USA and UK again in 1992. VHS tapes of the complete TV series and The Making of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy were published by CBS-Fox video in 1993. Also in 1993, Adams spent some time living in New Mexico, working on another version of the screenplay for the movie adaptation of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Unabridged audiobook versions of all five novels were published in 1994. A new omnibus edition of the five novels, The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide, was published in 1997. Hollywood Pictures got the rights to the movie in 1998, and released it worldwide (under the banners of Touchstone Pictures and Spyglass Pictures) in 2005.

Stage adaptations of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy appeared in California in 1990 and 1994, Hawaii in 1999, New York in 2002, San Francisco in 2003, Florida in 2004, and Philadelphia in 2006. Some of these were adaptations from the books, and the New York and Florida versions were adaptations of the first six radio scripts.

[edit] Notes

<references />

[edit] References

75px The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
By Douglas Adams
Books: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy | The Restaurant at the End of the Universe | Life, the Universe and Everything | So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish | Mostly Harmless | Young Zaphod Plays it Safe | The Original Radio Scripts
Media: Radio series (Phases 1 & 2, Phases 3, 4 & 5) | TV series | Movie | Computer game | Differences between versions
Characters: Arthur Dent | Ford Prefect | Zaphod Beeblebrox | Marvin | Trillian |Slartibartfast | Minor characters
Places: List of places | Total Perspective Vortex | Heart of Gold | Wikkit Gate | Starship Titanic | Galactic Empire | Whole Sort of General Mish Mash
Miscellanea: Races and species | The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything | Babel fish | Bistromathic drive | Cultural references | Infinidim Enterprises | Infinite Improbability Drive | International Phenomenon | Notable phrases | Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster | Point-of-view gun | Somebody Else's Problem field | Sirius Cybernetics Corporation | Vogon poetry | Other miscellanea

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