Rear Window - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Rear Window"
Rear Window (1954)
Timing: 1:52 (112 min)
Rear Window - TMDB rating
8.3/10
7096
Rear Window - Kinopoisk rating
8.021/10
69008
Rear Window - IMDB rating
8.5/10
566000

Actors and characters

Photo James Stewart #48032Photo James Stewart #48033Photo James Stewart #48034Photo James Stewart #48035

James Stewart

James Stewart
Character L.B. Jefferies
Photo Grace Kelly #93448Photo Grace Kelly #93449Photo Grace Kelly #93450Photo Grace Kelly #93451

Grace Kelly

Grace Kelly
Character Lisa Fremont
Photo Wendell Corey #93459Photo Wendell Corey #93460Photo Wendell Corey #93461Photo Wendell Corey #93462

Wendell Corey

Wendell Corey
Character Thomas Doyle
Photo Thelma Ritter #44716

Thelma Ritter

Thelma Ritter
Character Stella
Photo Raymond Burr #93463Photo Raymond Burr #93464Photo Raymond Burr #93465Photo Raymond Burr #93466

Raymond Burr

Raymond Burr
Character Lars Thorwald
Photo Judith Evelyn #84324Photo Judith Evelyn #84325

Judith Evelyn

Judith Evelyn
Character Miss Lonelyhearts
Photo Ross Bagdasarian #53026

Ross Bagdasarian

Ross Bagdasarian
Character Songwriter
Photo Georgine Darcy #93468Photo Georgine Darcy #93469Photo Georgine Darcy #93470Photo Georgine Darcy #93471

Georgine Darcy

Georgine Darcy
Character Miss Torso
Photo Sara Berner #93473

Sara Berner

Sara Berner
Character Woman on Fire Escape
Photo Frank Cady #93474Photo Frank Cady #93475

Frank Cady

Frank Cady
Character Man on Fire Escape
Photo Jesslyn Fax #82635

Jesslyn Fax

Jesslyn Fax
Character Miss Hearing Aid
Rand Harper
Character Newlywed
Photo Irene Winston #93472

Irene Winston

Irene Winston
Character Emma Thorwald
Havis Davenport
Character Newlywed
Photo Jerry Antes #93476
Jerry Antes
Character Dancer with Miss Torso (uncredited)
Photo Benny Bartlett #93477

Benny Bartlett

Benny Bartlett
Character Man with Miss Torso (uncredited)

Sue Casey

Sue Casey
Character Sunbather (uncredited)
Photo Iphigenie Castiglioni #93478

Iphigenie Castiglioni

Iphigenie Castiglioni
Character Woman with Bird (uncredited)
James Cornell
Character (uncredited)
Don Dunning
Character Detective (uncredited)
Photo Marla English #93479Photo Marla English #93480Photo Marla English #93481Photo Marla English #93482

Marla English

Marla English
Character Girl at Songwriter's Party (uncredited)
Photo Bess Flowers #58646Photo Bess Flowers #58647

Bess Flowers

Bess Flowers
Character Songwriter's Party Guest with Poodle (uncredited)

Art Gilmore

Art Gilmore
Character Radio Announcer (voice) (uncredited)
Photo Fred Graham #58653

Fred Graham

Fred Graham
Character Detective (uncredited)
Photo Kathryn Grant #93483Photo Kathryn Grant #93484Photo Kathryn Grant #93485Photo Kathryn Grant #93486

Kathryn Grant

Kathryn Grant
Character Girl at Songwriter's Party (uncredited)
Charles Harvey
Character (uncredited)
Len Hendry
Character Policeman (uncredited)
Photo Alfred Hitchcock #74403Photo Alfred Hitchcock #74404Photo Alfred Hitchcock #74405Photo Alfred Hitchcock #74406

Alfred Hitchcock

Alfred Hitchcock
Character Clock-Winder in Songwriter's Apartment (uncredited)
Photo Harry Landers #93488
Harry Landers
Character Man with Miss Lonelyhearts (uncredited)
Alan Lee
Character Newlyweds' Landlord (uncredited)
Mike Mahoney
Character Policeman (uncredited)
Jonnie Paris
Character Sunbather (uncredited)
Photo Eddie Parker #52573Photo Eddie Parker #52574

Eddie Parker

Eddie Parker
Character Detective (uncredited)
Robert Sherman
Character (uncredited)
Photo Dick Simmons #93489Photo Dick Simmons #93490

Dick Simmons

Dick Simmons
Character Man with Miss Torso (uncredited)
Ralph Smiley
Character Carl (uncredited)
Photo Jack Stoney #92658
Jack Stoney
Character Ice Man (uncredited)
Photo Anthony Warde #93491

Anthony Warde

Anthony Warde
Character Detective (uncredited)
Photo Gig Young #89090Photo Gig Young #89091Photo Gig Young #89092Photo Gig Young #89093

Gig Young

Gig Young
Character Jeff's Editor (voice) (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on Cornell Woolrich's short story "Surely, It Was Murder".
  • Alfred Hitchcock's cameo – he winds a watch in the musician's apartment.
  • The comical episode with the mattress in the rain was provoked by the director: he told the man to pull it towards the left window, and the woman – towards the right. This confused the actors, and the scene made it into the film without additional takes.
  • The studio sets used in the film were the largest built at Paramount Pictures at the time of its creation.
  • The love relationship between the main character and his girlfriend was modeled after the romance between the famous photographer Robert Capa and the actress Ingrid Bergman.
  • The main character uses an Exakta VX camera with a Kilfitt Fern-Kilar f/5.6 400mm lens and wears a Tissot watch.
  • This is the only film in which Grace Kelly can be seen with a cigarette.
  • The colors on the film faded and bleached as early as the 1960s, and the film stock was damaged. Despite fears that the film was lost forever, experts managed to restore it.
  • The entire film was shot on one set, which required months of painstaking work (planning and construction). The set, featuring apartments and a courtyard, was 30 meters wide, 145 meters long, and 12 meters high, and included 31 apartments, 8 of which were fully furnished. The courtyard set was located 6-9 meters below, and some buildings were 5-6 stories high. All apartments were equipped with electricity and water.
  • During filming, Alfred Hitchcock (1899-1980) consistently remained in Jeff's 'apartment,' while actors and actresses in other apartments listened to the director's instructions and directions through an earpiece.
  • Alfred Hitchcock allowed Georgine Darcy (1931-2004) to choreograph her own dance independently. The only thing he forbade her was to consult or take lessons from professional dancers, as he wanted her to give the impression of being a non-professional dancer.
  • Filming lasted a month, and throughout this time Georgine Darcy 'lived' in her character's apartment, resting there between takes as she would at home.
  • The effect of sunlight was created by using a thousand arc lamps. It took about 45 minutes to change the lighting in the frame from day to night, as required by the script.
  • All sounds in the film are diegetic, meaning their sources belong to the world constructed within the work on screen. This applies to all music, voices, and other sounds, with the only exception being the orchestral music, which is heard very briefly at the beginning of the film.
  • In the original work by Cornell Woolrich (1903-1968), which served as the literary basis for the plot, there was no love story, nor were there additional neighbors that the character played by James Stewart (1908-1997) observed. These plot elements were invented by Alfred Hitchcock and screenwriter John Michael Hayes (1919-2008). At Hitchcock’s insistence, Hayes specifically spent his free time with actress Grace Kelly (1929-1982), and some of her character’s traits were incorporated into the image and script as a result of interacting with Kelly.
  • Before filming the scene where the protagonist uses a flashbulb against the character played by Raymond Burr (1917-1993), several members of the film crew specifically went into a darkened room where another member of the creative team used a flashbulb on them. Afterwards, they reported seeing bright, rapidly expanding orange circles. To ensure the audience saw a similar effect, Hitchcock enlisted the services of special effects expert John P. Fulton (1902-1966).
  • According to Alfred Hitchcock, the film's plot was partially inspired by the 1910 story of Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen, who, while living in London, poisoned his wife and dismembered her body, telling the police she had gone to Los Angeles. Crippen was eventually exposed because his secretary, with whom he was having an affair, began appearing in public wearing Mrs. Crippen’s jewelry, and a family friend unsuccessfully searched for her in California. Scotland Yard became involved. Crippen and his lover fled, but were intercepted aboard a liner. Parts of Mrs. Crippen’s body were found concreted into the basement of the Crippen’s home.
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