Detective Story - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Detective Story"
Detective Story (1951)
Timing: 1:43 (103 min)
Detective Story - TMDB rating
6.944/10
134

Actors and characters

Photo Kirk Douglas #52490Photo Kirk Douglas #52491Photo Kirk Douglas #52492Photo Kirk Douglas #52493

Kirk Douglas

Kirk Douglas
Character Det. James McLeod
Photo Eleanor Parker #63514Photo Eleanor Parker #63515Photo Eleanor Parker #63516Photo Eleanor Parker #63517

Eleanor Parker

Eleanor Parker
Character Mary McLeod
Photo William Bendix #144884Photo William Bendix #144885

William Bendix

William Bendix
Character Det. Lou Brody
Photo Cathy OPhoto Cathy OPhoto Cathy OPhoto Cathy O

Cathy O'Donnell

Cathy O'Donnell
Character Susan Carmichael
Photo George Macready #105192Photo George Macready #105193

George Macready

George Macready
Character Karl Schneider
Photo Horace McMahon #285396

Horace McMahon

Horace McMahon
Character Lt. Monaghan
Photo Gladys George #102081Photo Gladys George #102082Photo Gladys George #102083

Gladys George

Gladys George
Character Miss Hatch
Photo Joseph Wiseman #78487Photo Joseph Wiseman #78488Photo Joseph Wiseman #78489

Joseph Wiseman

Joseph Wiseman
Character Charley Gennini
Photo Lee Grant #39259Photo Lee Grant #39260Photo Lee Grant #39261Photo Lee Grant #39262

Lee Grant

Lee Grant
Character Shoplifter
Photo Gerald Mohr #142689Photo Gerald Mohr #142690Photo Gerald Mohr #142691

Gerald Mohr

Gerald Mohr
Character Tami Giacoppetti
Photo Frank Faylen #48080Photo Frank Faylen #48081Photo Frank Faylen #48082

Frank Faylen

Frank Faylen
Character Det. Gallagher
Photo Craig Hill #107313
Craig Hill
Character Arthur Kindred
Photo Michael Strong #118902

Michael Strong

Michael Strong
Character Lewis Abbott
Photo Luis van Rooten #25875Photo Luis van Rooten #25876
Luis van Rooten
Character Joe Feinson
Photo Bert Freed #95685Photo Bert Freed #95686

Bert Freed

Bert Freed
Character Det. Dakis
Photo Warner Anderson #123296Photo Warner Anderson #123297
Warner Anderson
Character Endicott Sims
Photo Grandon Rhodes #117070
Grandon Rhodes
Character Det. O'Brien
Photo William Phillips #109126
William Phillips
Character Det. Pat Callahan
Russell Evans
Character Patrolman Barnes
Charles Campbell
Character Newspaper Photographer (uncredited)
Photo Edmund Cobb #2433
Edmund Cobb
Character Ed (uncredited)
Photo Ann Codee #107538Photo Ann Codee #107539
Ann Codee
Character French Woman (uncredited)
Photo Catherine Doucet #303860Photo Catherine Doucet #303861Photo Catherine Doucet #303862
Catherine Doucet
Character Mrs. Farragut (uncredited)
Photo Pat Flaherty #94395

Pat Flaherty

Pat Flaherty
Character Desk Sergeant (uncredited)
Photo Harper Goff #30128
Harper Goff
Character Dave Gallantz (uncredited)
Howard Joslin
Character Patrolman Gus Keogh (uncredited)
Donald Kerr
Character Taxi Driver (uncredited)
Photo George Magrill #90380Photo George Magrill #90381
George Magrill
Character Policeman (uncredited)
Mike Mahoney
Character Det. Coleman (uncredited)
James Maloney
Character Albert R. Pritchett (uncredited)
Lee Miller
Character Policeman (uncredited)
Ralph Montgomery
Character Policeman Finney (uncredited)
Photo Burt Mustin #234793Photo Burt Mustin #234794Photo Burt Mustin #234795

Burt Mustin

Burt Mustin
Character Willie the Janitor (uncredited)
Photo Jack Perry #77615
Jack Perry
Character Man in Custody (uncredited)
Robert S. Scott
Character Mulvey (uncredited)
Jack Shea
Character Desk Sergeant (uncredited)
Kay Wiley
Character Hysterical Woman (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on the play of the same name from 1949 by playwright Sidney Kingsley. Paramount Pictures bought the rights to adapt the play from Kingsley for $285,000 plus a percentage of the profits, which at that time was the highest price ever paid for the rights to a play adaptation. Kingsley specifically requested that William Wyler, who had successfully adapted his hit play "Dead End" to the screen in 1937, direct the film. Kingsley himself considered the film version of his play superior to the production he staged on Broadway.
  • In preparation for his role in 'The Detective Story,' Kirk Douglas worked for several weeks alongside detectives from a real police station in New York and accompanied Los Angeles police officers during their field assignments. In addition, as part of his preparation, Douglas played the role of McLeod in a special staging of 'The Detective Story' at a theater in Phoenix, Arizona, for a week.
  • According to a March 1951 article in 'The New York Times', Wyler rehearsed for two weeks and then shot almost the entire film on a single soundstage at Paramount Studios in Los Angeles in just 24 days, ahead of schedule.
  • Work on the film's screenplay encountered numerous problems related to the restrictions of the Production Code. The main obstacle was that in the play and the initial screenplay, the character 'Karl Schneider' was an obstetrician performing illegal abortions, which the Code Administration would not approve at that time. Kingsley's play, and the first draft of the screenplay, clearly state that Karl Schneider is an obstetrician practicing illegal abortions, and Mary McLeod was his patient. In his letter of June 12, 1950, addressed to one of Paramount's executives, Luigi Luraschi, the director of the Production Code Administration, Joseph I. Breen, deemed this version of the script 'completely unacceptable… due to the theme of abortion.' In a memorandum dated June 23, 1950, Breen noted that Wyler had agreed to replace the underground obstetrician with a doctor without a license who traded in illegitimate babies.
  • After Breen suggested replacing 'abortions' with 'illegal births,' Wyler expressed disappointment in a July 1950 article in 'The New York Times' that the Code was 'outdated,' stating that the Administration's refusal to allow any discussion of abortion was 'ridiculous.' According to archival materials from the Production Code Administration, Paramount threatened to appeal Breen's decision to the Motion Picture Association of America in New York, emphasizing that abortion was depicted quite clearly as evil in the script. In a letter to the President of the Motion Picture Association of America, Eric Johnston, Breen objected that discussing the topic of abortion was 'extremely dangerous for an unprepared audience… especially for youth and adolescents,' and that it should not be raised at all. Although the final version of the film does not feature the word 'abortion,' and Schneider’s business is described as trading in babies, hints of abortion, particularly Schneider being referred to as a 'butcher,' remained in the film. Ultimately, in the final version of the script, Schneider became an underground obstetrician delivering babies out of wedlock and trading children. However, the text was written deliberately ambiguously, and viewers could deduce that Schneider was actually performing abortions.
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