Oklahoma! - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Oklahoma!"
Oklahoma! (1955)
Timing: 2:28 (148 min)
Oklahoma! - TMDB rating
6.619/10
181
Oklahoma! - Kinopoisk rating
5.99/10
513
Oklahoma! - IMDB rating
7/10
16000

Actors and characters

Photo Gordon MacRae #248106Photo Gordon MacRae #248107

Gordon MacRae

Gordon MacRae
Character Curly McLain
Photo Gloria Grahame #48088Photo Gloria Grahame #48089Photo Gloria Grahame #48090Photo Gloria Grahame #48091

Gloria Grahame

Gloria Grahame
Character Ado Annie Carnes
Photo Gene Nelson #248108Photo Gene Nelson #307537Photo Gene Nelson #307538

Gene Nelson

Gene Nelson
Character Will Parker
Photo Shirley Jones #111976Photo Shirley Jones #111977Photo Shirley Jones #111978Photo Shirley Jones #111979

Shirley Jones

Shirley Jones
Character Laurey Williams
Photo Eddie Albert #90983Photo Eddie Albert #90984

Eddie Albert

Eddie Albert
Character Ali Hakim
Photo James Whitmore #13932Photo James Whitmore #13933Photo James Whitmore #13934Photo James Whitmore #13935

James Whitmore

James Whitmore
Character Mr. Carnes
Photo Rod Steiger #88625Photo Rod Steiger #88626Photo Rod Steiger #88627Photo Rod Steiger #88628

Rod Steiger

Rod Steiger
Character Jud Fry
Photo Jay C. Flippen #88172Photo Jay C. Flippen #88173

Jay C. Flippen

Jay C. Flippen
Character Skidmore
Photo Roy Barcroft #185561Photo Roy Barcroft #185562Photo Roy Barcroft #185563Photo Roy Barcroft #185564

Roy Barcroft

Roy Barcroft
Character Marshal
Photo James Mitchell #248115
James Mitchell
Character Dream Curly / Dancer
Photo Bambi Linn #337939
Bambi Linn
Character Dream Laurey / Dancer
Jennie Workman
Character Dancer
Photo Virginia Bosler #248116
Virginia Bosler
Character Dancer
Photo Kelly Brown #202586Photo Kelly Brown #202587Photo Kelly Brown #202588
Kelly Brown
Character Dancer
Evelyn Taylor
Character Dancer
Lizanne Truex
Character Dancer
Jane Fischer
Character Dancer
Photo Marc Platt #202574Photo Marc Platt #202575Photo Marc Platt #202576

Marc Platt

Marc Platt
Character Dancer

What's left behind the scenes

  • 'Oklahoma!' was the first widescreen film in history shot using the Todd-AO system. Simultaneously with the 70mm widescreen version, the film was shot in the more common widescreen 'Cinemascope' system on standard 35mm film. This was done to allow cinemas without 70mm equipment to show the film. As a result, the two versions of the film differ significantly, as each uses different camera positions and editing plans.
  • Finding 'corn as high as an elephant' proved difficult – it simply wasn't the season. Help had to be sought from the agricultural department of the Amazon University. They managed to grow corn over seven meters high, so producer Oscar Hammerstein II (1895-1960) even joked that 'the corn is now as high as an elephant standing on the back of another elephant'.
  • When, in one scene, the heroines Lisann Trues (1931-2013) and Jane Fisher (1930-2018) jump from a moving train straight into the arms of cowboys, everything had to be calculated very precisely. Just before the first take, a representative of the Screen Actors Guild suggested 'changing something', and it turned out that due to the danger of this action (jumping from the train), the actresses were entitled to additional payments of $250. The scene was shot in seven takes. Trues was delighted because she had recently purchased a 1951 Ford and was just making payments on it at the time.
  • The film was shot in Arizona because Oklahoma was already so developed and densely built up by 1955 that it would have been difficult to find sparsely populated and underdeveloped areas from the beginning of the century, where the musical's plot unfolds.
  • Preparation for filming began a year before the actual shooting commenced. During preparation, the film's art director, Joseph S. Wright (1892-1985), learned that spring floods occurred in the areas where filming was planned. The budget-conscious producers objected, but he insisted on building a dam for $15,000 anyway. When the spring waters came as he had warned, the dam saved the sets worth over $250,000 from destruction.
  • “Oklahoma!” was the first widescreen film in history shot using the Todd-AO system. Simultaneously with the 70mm widescreen version, the film was shot in the more common widescreen system “CinemaScope” on standard 35mm film. This was done to allow cinemas without 70mm equipment to show the film. As a result, the two versions of the film differ significantly, as each uses different camera positions and editing plans.
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