McCabe & Mrs. Miller - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "McCabe & Mrs. Miller"
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)
Timing: 2:0 (120 min)
McCabe & Mrs. Miller - TMDB rating
7.2/10
436
McCabe & Mrs. Miller - Kinopoisk rating
7.278/10
2530
McCabe & Mrs. Miller - IMDB rating
7.6/10
30000

Actors and characters

Photo Warren Beatty #94983Photo Warren Beatty #94984Photo Warren Beatty #94985Photo Warren Beatty #94986

Warren Beatty

Warren Beatty
Character John McCabe
Photo Julie Christie #11620Photo Julie Christie #11621Photo Julie Christie #11622Photo Julie Christie #11623

Julie Christie

Julie Christie
Character Constance Miller
Photo William Devane #8602Photo William Devane #8603Photo William Devane #8604Photo William Devane #8605

William Devane

William Devane
Character The Lawyer
Photo John Schuck #77683Photo John Schuck #77684

John Schuck

John Schuck
Character Smalley
Photo Corey Fischer #104949
Corey Fischer
Character Mr. Elliot
Photo Bert Remsen #77524

Bert Remsen

Bert Remsen
Character Bart Coyle
Photo Shelley Duvall #43532Photo Shelley Duvall #43533Photo Shelley Duvall #43534Photo Shelley Duvall #43535

Shelley Duvall

Shelley Duvall
Character Ida Coyle
Photo Michael Murphy #58192Photo Michael Murphy #58193

Michael Murphy

Michael Murphy
Character Eugene Sears
Photo Antony Holland #104950

Antony Holland

Antony Holland
Character Hollander
Photo Hugh Millais #104951
Hugh Millais
Character Butler
Manfred Schulz
Character Kid
Jace Van Der Veen
Character Breed
Jackie Crossland
Character Lily
Elizabeth Murphy
Character Kate
Carey Lee McKenzie
Character Alma
Photo Thomas Hill #76811

Thomas Hill

Thomas Hill
Character Archer
Photo Linda Sorensen #58596
Linda Sorensen
Character Blanche
Elisabeth Knight
Character Birdie
Photo Janet Wright #62965

Janet Wright

Janet Wright
Character Eunice
Photo Maysie Hoy #18079
Maysie Hoy
Character Maisie
Linda Kupecek
Character Ruth

Jeremy Newson

Jeremy Newson
Character Jeremy Berg
Photo Wayne Robson #29167

Wayne Robson

Wayne Robson
Character Bartender
Photo Jack Riley #94022

Jack Riley

Jack Riley
Character Riley Quinn
Photo Robert Fortier #93065

Robert Fortier

Robert Fortier
Character Town Drunk
Photo Wayne Grace #39292

Wayne Grace

Wayne Grace
Character Bartender
Wes Taylor
Character Shorty Dunn
Anne Cameron
Character Mrs. Dunn
Graeme Campbell
Character Bill Cubbs
J.S. Johnson
Character J.J.
Joe Clarke
Character Joe Shortreed
Harry Frazier
Character Andy Anderson
Photo Edwin Collier #104952
Edwin Collier
Character Gilchrist
Photo Terence Kelly #45447

Terence Kelly

Terence Kelly
Character Quigley
Brantley Kearns
Character Fiddler
Photo Don Francks #91783

Don Francks

Don Francks
Character Buffalo
Rodney Gage
Character Sumner Washington
Lili Francks
Character Mrs. Washington
Photo Joan Tewkesbury #104953

Joan Tewkesbury

Joan Tewkesbury
Character Townsperson
Harvey Lowe
Character Townsperson
Eric Schneider
Character Townsperson
Milos Zatovic
Character Townsperson
Claudine Melgrave
Character Townsperson
Derek Keurvorst
Character Townsperson
Photo Alex Diakun #104954Photo Alex Diakun #104955
Alex Diakun
Character Townsperson

Gord Robertson

Gord Robertson
Character Townsperson
Photo Terence Hill #100665Photo Terence Hill #100666Photo Terence Hill #100667

Terence Hill

Terence Hill
Character Townsperson (uncredited)
Photo Dale Wilson #104956
Dale Wilson
Character Townsperson (uncredited)
Ed Hong-Louie
Character Chinese Worker (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on the novel by Edmund Norton, 'McCabe' (1959).
  • Director Robert Altman (1925-2006) and cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond (1930-2016) initially decided to “fog” the negative and then apply a wide variety of filters to the cameras, rather than process the film during post-production. However, this wasn’t done in the last 20 minutes of the film because Altman wanted to emphasize the danger facing McCabe (the difference from the previous scenes is noticeable when McCabe comes to, picks up the sawed-off shotgun, and heads towards the church).
  • Warren Beatty loved to shoot numerous takes of scenes he was in. Once, when Robert Altman was already intending to wrap up the shooting day, Beatty insisted on shooting new takes of material that had already been filmed. Altman left, and tasked his assistant with reshooting what Beatty insisted on. At the actor’s insistence, over 30 takes of the same scene were shot. Altman later repaid him in kind, demanding 25 takes of a scene with Beatty in the snow.
  • The film involved over 50 extras. Robert Altman allowed them to familiarize themselves with the huge set near Vancouver for several days, then offered them to choose their own roles (barber, lumberjack, saloon owner, housewife, and so on), and then to independently select clothing for their character and remain in that role for the next three months.
  • The locomotive that Mrs. Miller arrived on is authentic and operational; the film crew used it to power the sawmill.
  • The carpenters in the film were both locals and young men from the United States who were evading the draft for the Vietnam War; they were dressed in costumes appropriate for the period and used tools from that era, so they could go about their business in the background while the plot unfolded in the foreground.
  • The film was shot in West Vancouver and Squamish (a small town) in almost sequential order, which is extremely rare. The film crew found a suitable location and built sets there, just as McCabe built the town in the film.
  • Filming the confrontation and the church fire took 9 days. When only these scenes remained to be shot, it started to snow. Warren Beatty didn't want to film during the snowfall, but he had to, as everything else had already been shot. During breaks between takes, the cast and crew built snowmen and had snowball fights. The snowfall eventually stopped, but filming continued, so falling snow had to be added to the footage during post-production.
  • Hoses were run (and camouflaged) throughout the town so that they could film rain when required by the script. The weather in Vancouver is typically rainy, so the hoses rarely needed to be turned on.
  • The film is based on Edmund Naughton’s novel “McCabe” (1959).
Did you like the film?

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