See No Evil, Hear No Evil - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "See No Evil, Hear No Evil"
See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989)
Timing: 1:42 (102 min)
See No Evil, Hear No Evil - TMDB rating
6.753/10
1041
See No Evil, Hear No Evil - Kinopoisk rating
7.418/10
19285
See No Evil, Hear No Evil - IMDB rating
6.8/10
63000

Actors and characters

Photo Richard Pryor #84167Photo Richard Pryor #84168Photo Richard Pryor #84169Photo Richard Pryor #84170

Richard Pryor

Richard Pryor
Character Wallace 'Wally' Karue
Photo Gene Wilder #30094Photo Gene Wilder #30095Photo Gene Wilder #30096

Gene Wilder

Gene Wilder
Character Dave Lyons
Photo Kevin Spacey #2217Photo Kevin Spacey #2218Photo Kevin Spacey #2219Photo Kevin Spacey #2220

Kevin Spacey

Kevin Spacey
Character Kirgo
Photo Alan North #61584

Alan North

Alan North
Character Braddock
Photo John Capodice #7935

John Capodice

John Capodice
Character Scotto
Photo Tonya Pinkins #63316Photo Tonya Pinkins #63317Photo Tonya Pinkins #63318Photo Tonya Pinkins #63319

Tonya Pinkins

Tonya Pinkins
Character Leslie
Photo Mary Kay Adams #85289

Mary Kay Adams

Mary Kay Adams
Character Dr. Bennett
Photo Lauren Tom #32246Photo Lauren Tom #32247

Lauren Tom

Lauren Tom
Character Mitzie
Photo Anthony Zerbe #38542Photo Anthony Zerbe #38543Photo Anthony Zerbe #71394

Anthony Zerbe

Anthony Zerbe
Character Sutherland
Photo Kirsten Childs #85285
Kirsten Childs
Character Adele
Photo Hardy Rawls #85286
Hardy Rawls
Character Beefy Tourist
Photo Louis Giambalvo #85287
Louis Giambalvo
Character Gatlin
Photo Audrie Neenan #43438Photo Audrie Neenan #43439Photo Audrie Neenan #43440

Audrie Neenan

Audrie Neenan
Character Policewoman and Marilyn
Photo George Bartenieff #52255
George Bartenieff
Character Huddelston
Photo Bernie McInerney #62631

Bernie McInerney

Bernie McInerney
Character Dr. Cornfeld
Photo Keith Langsdale #85288
Keith Langsdale
Character Male Doctor
Photo Jamie deRoy #25145
Jamie deRoy
Character Female Doctor
Photo Alan Pottinger #51664
Alan Pottinger
Character Parking Attendant
Photo Lisby Larson #85290
Lisby Larson
Character Reporter
Photo Doug Yasuda #85291
Doug Yasuda
Character Professor Kasuda
Photo James Pyduck #85292
James Pyduck
Character Businessman
Photo Edward James Hyland #38990
Edward James Hyland
Character Cabbie
John Ring
Character Teller
Photo George Buck #85293
George Buck
Character Ray, Security Guard
Photo George Harris #13896Photo George Harris #13897

George Harris

George Harris
Character Bartender
Photo Zach Grenier #14475

Zach Grenier

Zach Grenier
Character Jerk
Photo Alice Spivak #85294
Alice Spivak
Character Dispatcher
Photo Shiek Mahmud-Bey #85295
Shiek Mahmud-Bey
Character Walkie-Talkie Cop
Photo Joel Swetow #21151

Joel Swetow

Joel Swetow
Character Cabbie
Photo Pirie MacDonald #85296
Pirie MacDonald
Character Lodge Tourist
Photo Tom Kubiak #85297
Tom Kubiak
Character Plainclothes Cop

What's left behind the scenes

  • While preparing for the role, Gene Wilder (born Jerome Silberman, 1933-2016) visited a special association for people with hearing impairments in New York. There he met speech therapist Karen Webb, who later became his 4th wife.
  • Gene Wilder refused to star in the film twice, but his agent eventually persuaded him to meet with the bosses of TriStar Pictures, who asked him to rewrite the script with his participation and that of Richard Pryor (1940-2005). Gene Wilder feared the film would be a mockery of people with disabilities, but he met with them during the preparation for the role and learned that people with disabilities also have a sense of humor. In addition, he began receiving letters from people with disabilities saying how great it would be to make a film where people with disabilities are the main characters, not secondary ones.
  • While preparing for the role, Richard Pryor visited the Braille Institute in Los Angeles, where he was shown how to realistically play a blind person with a cane, and also observed blind people closely.
  • Gene Wilder twice refused to star in the film, but his agent eventually persuaded him to meet with producers at TriStar Pictures, who asked him to rewrite the script with him and Richard Pryor. Wilder feared the film would mock people with disabilities, but he began receiving letters from such people about how great it would be to make a film where people with disabilities were the main characters.
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