The Apartment - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Apartment"
The Apartment (1960)
Timing: 2:5 (125 min)
The Apartment - TMDB rating
8.187/10
2613
The Apartment - Kinopoisk rating
8.009/10
29119
The Apartment - IMDB rating
8.3/10
218000

Actors and characters

Photo Jack Lemmon #77571Photo Jack Lemmon #77572Photo Jack Lemmon #77573Photo Jack Lemmon #77574

Jack Lemmon

Jack Lemmon
Character C.C. Baxter
Photo Shirley MacLaine #46952Photo Shirley MacLaine #46953Photo Shirley MacLaine #46954Photo Shirley MacLaine #46955

Shirley MacLaine

Shirley MacLaine
Character Fran Kubelik
Photo Fred MacMurray #92151Photo Fred MacMurray #92152Photo Fred MacMurray #92153Photo Fred MacMurray #92154

Fred MacMurray

Fred MacMurray
Character Jeff D. Sheldrake
Photo Ray Walston #77072Photo Ray Walston #77073Photo Ray Walston #77074Photo Ray Walston #77075

Ray Walston

Ray Walston
Character Joe Dobisch
Photo Jack Kruschen #92157Photo Jack Kruschen #92158Photo Jack Kruschen #92159

Jack Kruschen

Jack Kruschen
Character Dr. Dreyfuss
Photo David Lewis #92160Photo David Lewis #92161

David Lewis

David Lewis
Character Al Kirkeby
Photo Hope Holiday #92162
Hope Holiday
Character Margie MacDougall
Photo Joan Shawlee #77594Photo Joan Shawlee #77595Photo Joan Shawlee #77596

Joan Shawlee

Joan Shawlee
Character Sylvia
Photo Naomi Stevens #92163
Naomi Stevens
Character Mrs. Mildred Dreyfuss
Photo Johnny Seven #92164
Johnny Seven
Character Karl Matuschka
Photo Joyce Jameson #78293

Joyce Jameson

Joyce Jameson
Character The Blonde
Photo Willard Waterman #92165

Willard Waterman

Willard Waterman
Character Mr. Vanderhoff
Photo David White #92166

David White

David White
Character Mr. Eichelberger
Photo Edie Adams #61759Photo Edie Adams #61760Photo Edie Adams #61761

Edie Adams

Edie Adams
Character Miss Olsen
Photo Dorothy Abbott #92167

Dorothy Abbott

Dorothy Abbott
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Photo Ralph Moratz #92168
Ralph Moratz
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Joe Palma
Character Office Maintenance Man (uncredited)
Photo Bill Baldwin #62808

Bill Baldwin

Bill Baldwin
Character TV Movie Host (uncredited)
Benny Burt
Character Charlie (uncredited)
Photo Lynn Cartwright #92169Photo Lynn Cartwright #92170
Lynn Cartwright
Character Elevator Supervisor with Clicker (uncredited)
Mason Curry
Character (uncredited)
Photo David Macklin #92171
David Macklin
Character Messenger (uncredited)
Photo Hal Smith #18708

Hal Smith

Hal Smith
Character Man in Santa Claus Suit (uncredited)
Photo Paul Bradley #34882

Paul Bradley

Paul Bradley
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Photo Steve Carruthers #77603
Steve Carruthers
Character Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
Dick Cherney
Character Bar Patron (uncredited)
Photo Franklyn Farnum #77606Photo Franklyn Farnum #77607

Franklyn Farnum

Franklyn Farnum
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Photo Herschel Graham #48149
Herschel Graham
Character Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
Lars Hensen
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Photo Eugene Jackson #54852

Eugene Jackson

Eugene Jackson
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Frances Weintraub Lax
Character Mrs. Lieberman (uncredited)
William Meader
Character Executive (uncredited)
Photo Monty O

Monty O'Grady

Monty O'Grady
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Paul Power
Character Bar Patron (uncredited)
Tony Regan
Character Executive (uncredited)

Clark Ross

Clark Ross
Character Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
Norman Stevans
Character Office Worker (uncredited)
Sid Troy
Character Williams (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • Marilyn Monroe wanted to star in the film, but did not get the role.
  • To show a multitude of people working in a huge insurance company office, the following trick was devised: adult actors sat closest to the camera at desks, further away were children in adult costumes at specially made small tables, and even further away sat cardboard figures controlled by pulling on threads attached to them. This created the effect of a huge space filled with working people.
  • The idea for this film originally came to Billy Wilder (1906-2002) after watching David Lean's (1908-1991) drama 'Brief Encounter' (1945), when he wondered about a man who rents out his apartment for such extramarital affairs. Shirley MacLaine, who played the role of Fran, was given only the first 40 pages of the script so that she would not know the ending in advance. The actress herself thought at the time that the script was not yet finished.
  • Film critics in the socialist countries called this film an indictment of the American system and said that such a thing was only possible in a capitalist city like New York. At a dinner in honor of the film in East Berlin, Wilder stated that this story 'could happen anywhere – in Hong Kong, Tokyo, Rome, Paris, London' and could not happen only in Moscow. The East Germans erupted in applause. When the applause subsided, Wilder continued and said that it could not happen in Moscow because no resident there had their own apartment. This statement was met with complete silence.
  • Jack Lemmon later recounted that he learned a lot about filmmaking specifically from Billy Wilder – in particular, the use of nuances that audiences remember long after they’ve forgotten the other details of the film. One such nuance is the apartment key. According to the actor, many years after the film's release, people would approach him saying, “Jack, lend me the keys.”
  • Billy Wilder and screenwriter I.A.L. Diamond (1920-1988) did not allow for any deviations from the script whatsoever. Shirley MacLaine simply irritated them by constantly departing from it. One scene in the elevator had to be shot five times solely because she kept forgetting to say one word.
  • The film’s final, now-classic line was conceived at the last moment, right on the set.
  • The film's idea was partially based on a Hollywood scandal when, in 1951, producer Walter Wanger (1894-1968) shot Jennings Lang (1915-1996) over an affair with his wife, actress Joan Bennett (1910-1990). During his affair with Bennett, Lang used the apartment of one of his subordinates. Another plot element was also taken from life: a friend of I.A.L. Diamond once had a falling out with a girlfriend, and then one day returned home to find her had committed suicide in his bed.
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