The Bride of Frankenstein - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Bride of Frankenstein"
Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
Timing: 1:15 (75 min)
The Bride of Frankenstein - TMDB rating
7.481/10
914
The Bride of Frankenstein - Kinopoisk rating
7.101/10
5143
The Bride of Frankenstein - IMDB rating
7.8/10
59000

Actors and characters

Photo Boris Karloff #47783Photo Boris Karloff #47784Photo Boris Karloff #47785Photo Boris Karloff #47786

Boris Karloff

Boris Karloff
Character The Monster
Photo Ernest Thesiger #79723Photo Ernest Thesiger #79724Photo Ernest Thesiger #79725

Ernest Thesiger

Ernest Thesiger
Character Doctor Pretorius
Photo Colin Clive #86945Photo Colin Clive #86946Photo Colin Clive #86947

Colin Clive

Colin Clive
Character Henry Frankenstein
Photo O. P. Heggie #104060Photo O. P. Heggie #104061Photo O. P. Heggie #104062

O. P. Heggie

O. P. Heggie
Character Hermit
Photo Una OPhoto Una OPhoto Una O

Una O'Connor

Una O'Connor
Character Minnie
Photo Valerie Hobson #104054

Valerie Hobson

Valerie Hobson
Character Elizabeth
Photo Dwight Frye #79403

Dwight Frye

Dwight Frye
Character Karl
Photo Elsa Lanchester #78186Photo Elsa Lanchester #78187Photo Elsa Lanchester #78188Photo Elsa Lanchester #78189

Elsa Lanchester

Elsa Lanchester
Character Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley / The Monster's Bride
Ted Billings
Character Ludwig
Photo E. E. Clive #104057Photo E. E. Clive #104058Photo E. E. Clive #104059

E. E. Clive

E. E. Clive
Character Burgomaster
Photo Gavin Gordon #41907Photo Gavin Gordon #41908

Gavin Gordon

Gavin Gordon
Character Lord Byron
Photo Douglas Walton #104055Photo Douglas Walton #104056

Douglas Walton

Douglas Walton
Character Percy Bysshe Shelley
Photo Lucien Prival #94402
Lucien Prival
Character Butler
Photo Mary Gordon #104063

Mary Gordon

Mary Gordon
Character Hans' Wife
Photo Anne Darling #104064
Anne Darling
Character Shepherdess
Photo Billy Barty #89438

Billy Barty

Billy Barty
Character Baby (uncredited)
Robert Adair
Character Hunter in Woods (uncredited)
Norman Ainsley
Character Archbishop (uncredited)
Frank Benson
Character Villager (uncredited)
Photo Maurice Black #104065Photo Maurice Black #104066

Maurice Black

Maurice Black
Character Gypsy (uncredited)
Photo Walter Brennan #91900Photo Walter Brennan #91901Photo Walter Brennan #91902Photo Walter Brennan #91903

Walter Brennan

Walter Brennan
Character Peasant (uncredited)
Mae Bruce
Character Villager (uncredited)

A.S. Byron

A.S. Byron
Character King Homunculus (uncredited)
Photo John Carradine #41861Photo John Carradine #41862Photo John Carradine #41863Photo John Carradine #41864

John Carradine

John Carradine
Character Lost Hunter at Hermit's Cottage (uncredited)
Photo D
D'Arcy Corrigan
Character Procession Leader (uncredited)
Photo Grace Cunard #104068
Grace Cunard
Character Villager (uncredited)
J. Gunnis Davis
Character Uncle Glutz (uncredited)
Marie DeForrest
Character Ballerina (uncredited)
Photo Elspeth Dudgeon #104069

Elspeth Dudgeon

Elspeth Dudgeon
Character Gypsy's Mother (uncredited)
Photo Helen Jerome Eddy #104070Photo Helen Jerome Eddy #104071Photo Helen Jerome Eddy #104072Photo Helen Jerome Eddy #104073

Helen Jerome Eddy

Helen Jerome Eddy
Character Gypsy's Wife (uncredited)
Neil Fitzgerald
Character Rudy (uncredited)
Photo Brenda Fowler #104074
Brenda Fowler
Character Mother (uncredited)
Photo John George #79414

John George

John George
Character Villager (uncredited)
Photo Helen Gibson #104075

Helen Gibson

Helen Gibson
Character Villager (uncredited)
Photo Marilyn Harris #86958

Marilyn Harris

Marilyn Harris
Character Girl (uncredited)
Photo Carmencita Johnson #86965Photo Carmencita Johnson #86966
Carmencita Johnson
Character Friend of Murdered Girl (uncredited)
Photo Rollo Lloyd #104076
Rollo Lloyd
Character Neighbor (uncredited)
Photo Murdock MacQuarrie #104077Photo Murdock MacQuarrie #104078

Murdock MacQuarrie

Murdock MacQuarrie
Character Sympathetic Villager (uncredited)
Josephine McKim
Character Little Mermaid (uncredited)
Photo Torben Meyer #94400
Torben Meyer
Character Victim in flashback (uncredited)
Edwin Mordant
Character Coroner (uncredited)
Charles Murphy
Character Guard (uncredited)
Joseph North
Character Servant (uncredited)
Photo Helen Parrish #104079

Helen Parrish

Helen Parrish
Character Communion Girl (uncredited)
Photo Edward Peil Sr. #104080Photo Edward Peil Sr. #104081Photo Edward Peil Sr. #104082

Edward Peil Sr.

Edward Peil Sr.
Character Villager (uncredited)
Photo Tempe Pigott #100898

Tempe Pigott

Tempe Pigott
Character Auntie Glutz (uncredited)
Sarah Schwartz
Character Marta (uncredited)
Peter Shaw
Character Devil (uncredited)
Mary Stewart
Character Neighbor (uncredited)
Photo Frank Terry #104083
Frank Terry
Character Lost Hunter at Hermit's Cottage (uncredited)
Anders Van Haden
Character Villager (uncredited)
Photo Dorothy Vernon #94892

Dorothy Vernon

Dorothy Vernon
Character Maid (uncredited)
Lucio Villegas
Character Priest (uncredited)
Photo Joan Woodbury #41893Photo Joan Woodbury #41894

Joan Woodbury

Joan Woodbury
Character Queen Homunculus (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • Initially, there were 21 corpses in the film, but censors reduced the number of dead bodies.
  • Boris Karloff lost 20 pounds due to constantly being in makeup and costume.
  • Filming of the picture took 46 days.
  • In 1998, the film was included in the National Film Registry of the United States as being of significant artistic merit.
  • The role of Doctor Pretorius was initially offered to Claude Rains, but he had to decline due to filming commitments on another project.
  • For the role of the Bride, James Whale initially wanted to cast Brigitte Helm or Louise Brooks.
  • Shortly before filming began, Colin Clive broke his leg after falling from a horse. As a result, many of the scenes featuring Frankenstein were shot in a way that he was either sitting in a chair or lying in bed.
  • The working title of the film was “The Return of Frankenstein.”
  • The Bride is the only classic ‘monster’ character in the Universal films who doesn't kill anyone.
  • It is in this film that the monster speaks for the first time.
  • In the film's credits, a question mark appears instead of the name of the actress who played the Bride, with Elsa Lanchester only credited as playing Mary Shelley. This was clearly done in analogy with the first film in the series, where the name of Boris Karloff, who played the creature, was also replaced with a question mark in the opening credits to build suspense.
  • While filming the scene where the monster climbs out of the flooded basement of the burnt-down mill, Boris Karloff slipped and broke his leg. During subsequent filming, a metal pin on his shin, which was supposed to weigh down his gait, was bandaged to his broken leg as a splint to fix the fractured bone.
  • Boris Karloff protested the fact that his character begins to speak in "Bride of Frankenstein" (in the first "Frankenstein" the monster couldn't speak), but Whale did not heed his demands. Because the creature had to speak, Karloff had to leave his dental prosthesis in his mouth, which he removed in the first film, so in "Bride of Frankenstein" the creature's cheeks don't appear as sunken.
  • The appearance of the little people, who are the result of Pretorius's experiments, is a clear reference to the film "The Private Life of Henry VIII." Both films were united by the participation of Elsa Lanchester.
  • In the original version of the film, there was a scene where the hunchback Karl (Dwight Frye) kills his helpless relatives and stages the murder to look like the monster's work. This plotline was completely removed after preview screenings.
  • In total, scenes with a total length of about 15 minutes were removed from the film. Some of the removed scenes could have significantly affected the perception of the film—for example, one of the lost shots featured a monster-like baby doll holding a child. The censorship removal of scenes of violence led to a serious logical gap—the peasants' hatred of the Monster becomes inexplicable. All the material removed from the director's cut of the film is considered lost.
  • Boris Karloff protested that in "Bride of Frankenstein" his character begins to speak (in the first "Frankenstein" the monster could not speak), but Whale didn’t heed his demands. Because the creature had to speak, Karloff had to leave his dental prosthesis in his mouth, which he had removed in the first film, so in "Bride of Frankenstein" the creature’s cheeks appear less sunken.
  • The appearance of the little people, the result of Pretorius's experiments, is an obvious reference to the film "The Private Life of Henry VIII." Both films featured Elsa Lanchester.
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