Mr. Deeds Goes to Town - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town"
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (1936)
Timing: 1:55 (115 min)
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town - TMDB rating
7.543/10
398
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town - Kinopoisk rating
7.416/10
1837
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town - IMDB rating
7.8/10
25000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

Art Direction

Costume Design

Samuel Lange
Costume Design

Original Music Composer

Howard Jackson

Howard Jackson
Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Joseph Walker
Director of Photography

Still Photographer

Irving Lippman
Still Photographer

Screenplay

Story

Clarence Budington Kelland
Story

Assistant Director

Charles C. Coleman
Assistant Director

Music

Photo Louis Silvers #111323
Louis Silvers
Music

Sound Engineer

Stand In

Frances Morris
Stand In
Slim Talbot
Stand In

Visual Effects

Roy Davidson
Visual Effects

Sound Director

Music Director

What's left behind the scenes

  • Actress Jean Arthur (1900-1991) and director Frank Capra (1897-1991) only saw the film in its entirety in 1972 when they were guests at a film festival.
  • Jean Arthur was so afraid of filming that she often vomited before shooting, and in between takes she had to run to the makeup room, where she locked herself in and cried. However, in front of the camera, she behaved quite professionally. One of those who helped her feel comfortable on set was Gary Cooper (1901-1961).
  • Harry Cohn (1891-1958), founder, president, and producer of Columbia Pictures, made it a rule to only allow directors to shoot one take, which saved the studio a considerable amount of money, and strictly adhered to this rule. Frank Capra found a way around it. At the end of each take, he would not shout “Cut!” but “Once more!” and the actors would start the scene again.
  • One of the ways Frank Capra minimized studio management interference in the filmmaking process was by refusing to work while any of the bosses were present on set. As soon as Harry Cohn or any other executives appeared on set, Capra would announce a half-hour break. These delays cost the film company so much that Cohn rarely appeared on set.
  • Director Frank Capra was convinced from the very beginning that Gary Cooper would be perfect in the role of Longfellow Deeds. While waiting for Cooper to become available, the start of filming was delayed by six months, costing the film's budget $100,000.
  • Guided by the ideological postulate that justice is impossible in the United States, officials from the Soviet cultural sphere altered the film's ending for domestic release: the hero was imprisoned (a close-up of him behind bars appeared at the end), and the scene of Deeds's fellow townsmen rejoicing at his return from the city was even redubbed (more accurately, resubtitled): they ostensibly expressed outrage at his arrest.
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