Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory"
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971)
Timing: 1:40 (100 min)
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory - TMDB rating
7.483/10
3912
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory - Kinopoisk rating
7.348/10
19387
Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory - IMDB rating
7.8/10
244000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Writer

Photo Leslie Bricusse #67109
Leslie Bricusse
Writer

Casting

Marion Dougherty
Casting

Editor

David Saxon
Editor

Art Direction

Photo Harper Goff #30128
Harper Goff
Art Direction

Costume Design

Helen Colvig
Costume Design

Makeup Artist

Raimund Stangl
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Walter Scharf
Original Music Composer
Photo Leslie Bricusse #67109
Leslie Bricusse
Original Music Composer

Unit Production Manager

Renate Neuchl
Unit Production Manager

Second Assistant Director

Stefan Zürcher
Second Assistant Director

Director of Photography

Arthur Ibbetson
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Paul Wilson
Camera Operator

Associate Editor

Melvin Shapiro
Associate Editor

Production Manager

Pia Arnold
Production Manager

Boom Operator

Thomas Ubelacker
Boom Operator

Screenplay

Sound Designer

Karsten Ullrich
Sound Designer

Book

Location Assistant

Robert Newman
Location Assistant

Carpenter

Clarence Fay Konkel
Carpenter

Special Effects

Logan Frazee
Special Effects

Songs

Photo Leslie Bricusse #67109
Leslie Bricusse
Songs

Assistant Director

Wolfgang Glattes
Assistant Director
Jack Roe
Assistant Director

Music Editor

Jack K. Tillar
Music Editor

Additional Writing

Photo David Seltzer #114017

David Seltzer

David Seltzer
Additional Writing

Sound

Karsten Ullrich
Sound

Effects Supervisor

Richard Kuhn
Effects Supervisor

Hairdresser

Susi Krause
Hairdresser

Unit Manager

Renate Neuchl
Unit Manager

Modeling

Jim Danforth
Modeling

Construction Manager

Hendrik Wynands
Construction Manager

Sound Editor

Roger Sword
Sound Editor

Lyricist

Photo Leslie Bricusse #67109
Leslie Bricusse
Lyricist

Dialogue Coach

Frawley Becker
Dialogue Coach

Recording Supervision

Richard Portman
Recording Supervision

What's left behind the scenes

  • After reviewing the script, Gene Wilder (born Jerome Silberman, 1933-2016) agreed to play Willy Wonka on one condition: that he be allowed to limp, and then, when he first sees the children, do a backflip. When director Mel Stuart asked him why, Wilder replied that it would mean that from that moment on, no one would be able to tell whether he was lying and pretending, or if it was all real. Stuart asked the actor, “What if I don’t allow it, will you refuse to film?” to which Wilder replied, “I’m afraid so.”
  • Even Julie Dawn Cole, who played Veruca, was fooled by the scene in which Willy, limping, emerges from the factory gates to meet the winners of the golden tickets. She thought Gene Wilder had actually injured his leg and that filming would be interrupted because of it. Her reaction in this scene – as were the reactions of everyone else – was completely genuine.
  • When Gene Wilder passed away in 2016, Peter Ostrum replaced his social media profile picture with the following: “Former child actor, veterinarian who inherited the chocolate factory on August 29, 2016.”
  • The chocolate river was created from nearly 568,000 liters of water, real chocolate, and cream. The original composition of the chocolate river had to be changed because the mixture turned blood-red. Due to the presence of cream, the mixture began to spoil, and by the end of filming it simply smelled terrible. Michael Ballner, who played Augustus Gloop, later described it as “dirty and stinky.”
  • Grandpa George was played by Ernst Ziegler (1894 – 1974), who could barely see anything due to the effects of poison gas during World War I. When his character needed to look in a specific direction, the actor oriented himself to the light from a red lamp specially turned on for him.
  • Denise Nickerson, who played Violet, refused to pick her nose when required by the script. She had a romantic attraction to Peter Ostrum, who played Charlie, and therefore was shy in his presence.
  • Once at school, during a math lesson, the students began to point and laugh at Denise Nickerson, and one of her friends told her she was turning blue. Makeup had gotten into her skin pores (while she was preparing for filming), and at that moment, the makeup began to emerge from the pores to the surface.
  • The only role of Peter Ostrum, who played Charlie. He was offered a contract for 5 films, but Peter refused, he did not want to become an actor and preferred to make veterinary medicine his profession.
  • The scene with Denise Nickerson’s character and the blueberries was filmed in the middle of the day, and a lunch break was included in the filming schedule. Throughout this time, Nickerson remained in the berry costume, and she had to be turned over several times to ensure normal blood circulation.
  • The chocolate bars were mostly made of wood.
  • During the car wash scene, foam from regular fire extinguishers was used, but neither the actors nor the crew knew at the time that this type of foam strongly irritates the skin. As a result, after filming this scene, a break of several days was needed to allow the actors to recover.
  • Off set, the Oompa-Loompas led a lavish lifestyle, traveling to bars in a limousine.
  • In the scene where Willy Wonka drinks from a cup shaped like a flower and then eats the cup, the cup was made of wax. Gene Wilder had to chew on pieces of wax throughout the entire scene, only spitting them out when filming was finished.
  • The film was shot in Munich (Germany), but to film the Oompa-Loompas, producers had to find people of short stature not only in Germany. Many of those cast as Oompa-Loompas spoke little to no English, so during the musical numbers, it's noticeable that some Oompa-Loompas don't know the words.
  • The line from Mike Teevee's father, “Maybe you should try getting to twelve years old first, son,” was filmed over 40 times.
  • Julie Dawn Cole did not know that the rock in the chocolate room she fell into would be real, and she badly broke her leg, leaving a scar on it later.
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