Free Willy - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Free Willy"
Free Willy (1993)
Timing: 1:52 (112 min)
Free Willy - TMDB rating
6.18/10
1916
Free Willy - Kinopoisk rating
7.654/10
17960
Free Willy - IMDB rating
6/10
81436

Actors and characters

Photo Jason James Richter #51510Photo Jason James Richter #51511
Jason James Richter
Character Jesse

Keiko

Keiko
Character Willy
Photo Lori Petty #84970Photo Lori Petty #84971Photo Lori Petty #84972

Lori Petty

Lori Petty
Character Rae Lindley
Photo August Schellenberg #83851

August Schellenberg

August Schellenberg
Character Randolph Johnson
Photo Michael Madsen #12142Photo Michael Madsen #12143Photo Michael Madsen #12144Photo Michael Madsen #12145

Michael Madsen

Michael Madsen
Character Glen Greenwood
Photo Jayne Atkinson #29586Photo Jayne Atkinson #29587

Jayne Atkinson

Jayne Atkinson
Character Annie Greenwood
Photo Mykelti Williamson #2115Photo Mykelti Williamson #2116Photo Mykelti Williamson #2117Photo Mykelti Williamson #2118

Mykelti Williamson

Mykelti Williamson
Character Dwight Mercer
Isaiah Malone
Character Vector
Betsy Toll
Character Passerby #1
Rob Sample
Character Passerby #2
Merrilyn Jones
Character Passerby #3
Mickey Gaines
Character Waiter
Justin R. Hall
Character Fish Thrower
Robert M. Duque
Character Fish Thrower
Sam Samson
Character Fish Thrower
Willis Van Dusen
Character Willis Van Dusen
Tom Lasswell
Character Brody
Moultrie Patten
Character Homeless Man
Ed Murphy
Character Homeless Man
Jim Michaels
Character Announcer

What's left behind the scenes

  • Keiko, the orca used in the filming of the movie, died on December 12, 2003, from a bout of pneumonia off the coast of Norway. The whale was 27 years old at the time.
  • The film's box office success and popularity served as a starting point for a letter-writing campaign and an entire movement aimed at freeing Keiko, the orca held captive at Reino Aventura amusement park in Mexico City. Under the close scrutiny of the media, the orca was transported to a larger pool in Oregon with the help of the US Air Force, and later released into the wild.
  • At the end of the film, during the closing credits, the phone number of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society was displayed, and millions of moviegoers called, resulting in approximately $20 million in donations.
  • In the most challenging scenes, an animatronic model was used instead of a live orca, and computer graphics took center stage in the climactic scene at the end of the film.
  • Filming took place from May 18 to August 17, 1992, in the American state of Oregon and Mexico City, Mexico.
Did you like the film?

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