The Dirty Dozen - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Dirty Dozen"
The Dirty Dozen (1967)
Timing: 2:29 (149 min)
The Dirty Dozen - TMDB rating
7.584/10
1300
The Dirty Dozen - Kinopoisk rating
7.231/10
2696
The Dirty Dozen - IMDB rating
7.7/10
77739

Actors and characters

Photo Lee Marvin #87281Photo Lee Marvin #87282Photo Lee Marvin #87283Photo Lee Marvin #87284

Lee Marvin

Lee Marvin
Character Maj. John Reisman
Photo Ernest Borgnine #56007Photo Ernest Borgnine #56008Photo Ernest Borgnine #56009Photo Ernest Borgnine #56010

Ernest Borgnine

Ernest Borgnine
Character Maj. Gen. Worden
Photo Charles Bronson #44219Photo Charles Bronson #44220Photo Charles Bronson #44221Photo Charles Bronson #44222

Charles Bronson

Charles Bronson
Character Joseph Wladislaw
Photo Jim Brown #76766Photo Jim Brown #76767Photo Jim Brown #76768Photo Jim Brown #76769

Jim Brown

Jim Brown
Character Robert Jefferson
Photo John Cassavetes #87286Photo John Cassavetes #87287Photo John Cassavetes #87288Photo John Cassavetes #87289

John Cassavetes

John Cassavetes
Character Victor Franko
Photo Richard Jaeckel #87290

Richard Jaeckel

Richard Jaeckel
Character Sergeant Bowren
Photo George Kennedy #78772Photo George Kennedy #78773Photo George Kennedy #78774Photo George Kennedy #78775

George Kennedy

George Kennedy
Character Major Max Armbruster
Photo Trini López #87291

Trini López

Trini López
Character Pedro Jiminez
Photo Ralph Meeker #87292Photo Ralph Meeker #87293

Ralph Meeker

Ralph Meeker
Character Captain Stuart Kinder
Photo Robert Ryan #87294Photo Robert Ryan #87295Photo Robert Ryan #87296Photo Robert Ryan #87297

Robert Ryan

Robert Ryan
Character Col. Everett Dasher Breed
Photo Telly Savalas #61237Photo Telly Savalas #61238Photo Telly Savalas #61239Photo Telly Savalas #61240

Telly Savalas

Telly Savalas
Character Archer Maggott
Photo Donald Sutherland #6096Photo Donald Sutherland #6097Photo Donald Sutherland #6098Photo Donald Sutherland #6099

Donald Sutherland

Donald Sutherland
Character Vernon Pinkley
Photo Clint Walker #41928

Clint Walker

Clint Walker
Character Samson Posey
Photo Robert Webber #50956

Robert Webber

Robert Webber
Character General Denton
Photo Tom Busby #87302
Tom Busby
Character Milo Vladek
Photo Ben Carruthers #87303

Ben Carruthers

Ben Carruthers
Character Glenn Gilpin
Stuart Cooper
Character Roscoe Lever
Photo Robert Phillips #87304

Robert Phillips

Robert Phillips
Character Cpl. Morgan - MP Guard
Photo Colin Maitland #87305
Colin Maitland
Character Seth Sawyer
Photo Al Mancini #87306

Al Mancini

Al Mancini
Character Tassos Bravos
George Roubicek
Character Pvt. Arthur James Gardner
Thick Wilson
Character Gen. Worden's Aide
Photo Dora Reisser #87307
Dora Reisser
Character German Officer's Girl
Michael Anthony
Character German Officer in Staff Car (uncredited)
Leo Britt
Character German General in Staff Car (uncredited)
Photo Alan Chuntz #87308
Alan Chuntz
Character French Servant (uncredited)
Photo Gary Files #87309
Gary Files
Character Ambulance Driver (uncredited)
Photo Judith Furse #87310

Judith Furse

Judith Furse
Character Drunken General's Wife (uncredited)
Photo Hal Galili #86701
Hal Galili
Character MP Master Sergeant / Hangman (uncredited)
Photo Romo Gorrara #39370
Romo Gorrara
Character Airborne Soldier (uncredited)
Photo Willoughby Gray #87311

Willoughby Gray

Willoughby Gray
Character German Officer (uncredited)
Photo Gerard Heinz #87312
Gerard Heinz
Character Card-Playing German Officer (uncredited)
Photo John G. Heller #87313
John G. Heller
Character 2nd German Sentry at Chateau (uncredited)
George Hilsdon
Character Medical Officer at Hanging (uncredited)
Photo John Hollis #53332

John Hollis

John Hollis
Character German Porter at Chateau (uncredited)
Photo Alf Joint #83229
Alf Joint
Character German Sentry Wanting Light (uncredited)
Photo Juba Kennerley #81051
Juba Kennerley
Character German Officer (uncredited)
Photo Hildegard Knef #87314Photo Hildegard Knef #87315Photo Hildegard Knef #87316

Hildegard Knef

Hildegard Knef
Character (uncredited)
Photo Ann Lancaster #87317
Ann Lancaster
Character Prostitute (uncredited)
Photo Richard Marner #87318
Richard Marner
Character German Sentry at Chateau (uncredited)
Photo Dick Miller #59005Photo Dick Miller #59006Photo Dick Miller #59007

Dick Miller

Dick Miller
Character MP at Hanging (uncredited)
Photo Lionel Murton #87319
Lionel Murton
Character MP Lt. Col. in charge at hanging (uncredited)
Photo Suzanne Owens-Duval #87320
Suzanne Owens-Duval
Character Prostitute (uncredited)
Photo Mike Reid #87321

Mike Reid

Mike Reid
Character Sergeant at War Games HQ (uncredited)

Terry Richards

Terry Richards
Character Staff Sergeant MacIntosh Blake (uncredited)
Photo Frederick Schiller #87322
Frederick Schiller
Character Drunken German General (uncredited)
Richard Shaw
Character German Officer Who Seals the Bunker (uncredited)
Photo Warren Stanhope #87323
Warren Stanhope
Character German Officer (uncredited)
Photo Hedger Wallace #87324
Hedger Wallace
Character German Officer (uncredited)
Theodore Wilhelm
Character German Officer (uncredited)
Photo Rocky Taylor #3804

Rocky Taylor

Rocky Taylor
Character Airborne Soldier (uncredited)
Photo Burnell Tucker #1872

Burnell Tucker

Burnell Tucker
Character Army Doctor (uncredited)
Photo Vicki Woolf #87325
Vicki Woolf
Character Prostitute (uncredited)
Photo Michael Segal #87326Photo Michael Segal #87327
Michael Segal
Character Airborne Band Conductor (uncredited)
Gerry Crampton
Character Staff Sergeant Alistair Clayton (uncredited)
Jack Carter
Character Military Policman (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • One scene required Lee Marvin to drive a car with Charles Bronson’s character in the passenger seat. Everything was ready to shoot, except for Marvin. He was eventually found in a pub in central London, taken to the studio, and pumped full of coffee to sober up. When Marvin literally stumbled out of the car on set, Bronson exclaimed: “Goddamn it, Lee, I’ll just kill you!”
  • Clint Walker was originally supposed to play a role in one scene, but seeing his negative attitude towards it, director Robert Aldrich ordered the script to be changed so that Donald Sutherland’s character would play the scene instead. It was Sutherland’s performance in that scene that got him cast in Robert Altman’s war drama *MASH*, which ultimately made him famous.
  • Work on the film dragged on for so long that Jim Brown began to worry he would miss training camp before the start of the 1965-1966 football season. Eventually, NFL management began threatening Brown with fines and suspension if he didn’t leave the set immediately and report to training camp. Brown called a press conference and announced his retirement from football, even though he was considered one of the best players at the time.
  • Once, at a reception in London, Lee Marvin got so drunk that he made an indecent proposal to a woman older than himself, and in a particularly vulgar manner. Because he was slurring his words, she politely asked him to repeat himself, which he did. The woman turned out to be Sean Connery’s aunt, who was also at the reception. He was walking towards where Marvin was when producer Kenneth Hyman stopped him, saying: “Sean, just don’t hit him in the face, he has a close-up to shoot tomorrow.” Connery, after being explained what happened, simply burst out laughing and made some joke about all producers in general.
  • Lee Marvin served as a consultant on military uniforms and weapons, striving to portray the war as realistically as possible in the film and complaining about the falseness of certain scenes (for example, when one character takes a bayonet from another). Director Robert Aldrich simply remarked in response that the entire script was ridiculous and absurd, and that by the time viewers left the cinema, they would be so stunned by the action scenes, explosions, and deaths that they wouldn’t think about the film's flaws.
  • The department responsible for the castle set designs truly outdid themselves. The script required the castle to be blown up, but the set was built so sturdily that it would have taken 70 tons of explosives to destroy it. Therefore, part of the building had to be rebuilt – this time from cork.
  • Robert Aldrich ordered the actors to change their modern hairstyles to ones that would be appropriate for the time and place specified in the script. Marvin immediately got a haircut, while the others preferred to simply shorten the hairstyles they already had. Aldrich repeated twice to everyone that their appearance did not match the image, and finally ordered all the actors to either do as he said or bring their lawyers next time.
  • Robert Aldrich was informed that he could be nominated for an Academy Award in the 'Best Director' category if he cut the scene with Jim Brown's character throwing grenades into a bomb shelter (where women and children were hiding, with no chance of surviving the grenade blasts). Aldrich refused to cut the scene in order to show the horrors of war.
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