The Great Train Robbery - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Great Train Robbery"
The Great Train Robbery (1903)
Timing: 0:12 (12 min)
The Great Train Robbery - TMDB rating
7/10
569

Actors and characters

Photo Gilbert M. Anderson #209935Photo Gilbert M. Anderson #209936Photo Gilbert M. Anderson #209937Photo Gilbert M. Anderson #209938

Gilbert M. Anderson

Gilbert M. Anderson
Character Bandit / Shot Passenger / Tenderfoot Dancer (uncredited)
John Manus Dougherty Sr.
Character Bandit (uncredited)
Frank Hanaway
Character Bandit (uncredited)
Adam Charles Hayman
Character Bandit (uncredited)
Photo Robert Milasch #86978
Robert Milasch
Character Trainman / Bandit (uncredited)
Marie Murray
Character Dance-Hall Dancer (uncredited)
Mary Snow
Character Little Girl (uncredited)
A.C. Abadie
Character Sheriff (uncredited)
Walter Cameron
Character Sheriff (uncredited)

Donald Gallaher

Donald Gallaher
Character Little Boy (uncredited)
Shadrack E. Graham
Character Child (uncredited)
Photo George Barnes #209941Photo George Barnes #209942Photo George Barnes #209943
George Barnes
Character (uncredited)
Photo Morgan Jones #316566
Morgan Jones
Character (uncredited)
Photo Justus D. Barnes #209944Photo Justus D. Barnes #209945Photo Justus D. Barnes #209946

Justus D. Barnes

Justus D. Barnes
Character Bandit Who Fires at Camera (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on a story by Scott Marble, written in 1896. However, the screenplay also draws on real events that occurred later than Marble's book. On August 29, 1900, four criminals from the 'Hole in the Wall' gang, led by the legendary figure of many subsequent Westerns, Butch Cassidy, attacked Union Pacific train No. 3 passing through Table Rock, Wyoming. The bandits forced the conductor to detach the passenger cars, then blew up the safe in the mail car and escaped with $5,000 in cash.
  • Edwin S. Porter, inspired by Méliès' famous 'A Trip to the Moon,' became eager to make a similar film using technical techniques unusual for the time. The film employs innovations such as cross-cutting (changing episodes creating the impression of simultaneous on-screen action) and double exposure. Finally, location shooting instead of purely studio work created a complete sense of realism.
  • The film consists of 14 scenes, which were shot in November 1903 in New Jersey, where Thomas A. Edison's New Studio was located. Specifically, the railroad episodes were filmed on the Lackawanna Railroad, near Paterson, New Jersey. All other scenes of 'The Great Train Robbery' were filmed in Essex County Park near West Orange, New Jersey.
  • The use of the most modern special effects, and especially the final scene, shocked audiences at the premiere.
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