The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre"
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
Timing: 1:23 (83 min)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - TMDB rating
7.283/10
3757
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - Kinopoisk rating
6.625/10
52780
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - IMDB rating
7.4/10
211000

Actors and characters

Photo Marilyn Burns #9861Photo Marilyn Burns #9862

Marilyn Burns

Marilyn Burns
Character Sally
Photo Paul A. Partain #9875Photo Paul A. Partain #9876

Paul A. Partain

Paul A. Partain
Character Franklin

William Vail

William Vail
Character Kirk
Photo Teri McMinn #9874

Teri McMinn

Teri McMinn
Character Pam
Photo Edwin Neal #9873

Edwin Neal

Edwin Neal
Character Hitchhiker
Photo Jim Siedow #63494Photo Jim Siedow #63495

Jim Siedow

Jim Siedow
Character Old Man
Photo Gunnar Hansen #9868Photo Gunnar Hansen #9869

Gunnar Hansen

Gunnar Hansen
Character Leatherface
Photo John Dugan #9870

John Dugan

John Dugan
Character Grandfather
Robert Courtin
Character Window Washer
William Creamer
Character Bearded Man

John Henry Faulk

John Henry Faulk
Character Storyteller
Jerry Green
Character Cowboy
Ed Guinn
Character Cattle Truck Driver
Joe Bill Hogan
Character Drunk
Perry Lorenz
Character Pick Up Driver
Photo John Larroquette #22988

John Larroquette

John Larroquette
Character Narrator (voice)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The chase of Marilyn Burns by Leatherface turned out to be genuinely bloody: during the escape, the actress was badly cut by tree branches, so the blood on her clothes is real.
  • The painting's original title was "Headcheese".
  • According to Tobe Hooper himself, the idea for the film came to him while visiting a hardware store.
  • The Sawyer family was modeled after serial killer Ed Gein.
  • The film features a Poulan 306A chainsaw, but the label with the company name was removed from the product just in case to avoid lawsuits.
  • As a sound backdrop, the director used a recording of the screams of livestock being sent to the slaughterhouse.
  • The film was shot in chronological order and took 32 days to film.
  • One of the least gory horror films in the history of cinema. This was because the director, screenwriter, and producer Tobe Hooper planned to make a "PG" rated film (parental guidance suggested), without emphasizing violence and corresponding language, completely excluding nudity and, rather, hinting at horrors than showing them on screen in close-up. All this made the film even more frightening, and it received an "X" rating (persons under the age of 17 are not admitted to screenings). Hooper later encountered similar problems with the sequel.
  • The script for the character of Leatherface, played by Gunnar Hansen, was written with complete nonsense as dialogue, and Tobe Hooper had to explain to the actor in detail what his character meant in each case, while the actor had to figure out how to convey it without using words.
  • Due to the brutality of the script, Gunnar Hansen initially refused the role of Leatherface. He was persuaded to accept it by Marilyn Burns, the actress playing Sally, who was his girlfriend at the time.
  • After spending some time in the makeup chair, John Dugan, who was cast as Grandpa, decided he didn't want to be made up anymore, which meant all the scenes with him had to be shot in one day while he still had his makeup on. The entire filming process took 36 hours (including 5 hours for makeup application), and it all happened in the heat of summer, when the temperature outside approached 40 degrees Celsius (and sometimes exceeded it). A significant amount of time was spent filming the dinner scene, where Dugan's character was, so to speak, 'dressed to the nines' while being in a room with animal carcasses and spoiled food (without air conditioning or fans). During filming, some members of the crew felt sick from the stench.
  • According to Gunnar Hansen, he didn't get along with Paul A. Partain, who played Franklin, during filming. Several years later, they met again, and Hansen realized that Partain had simply stayed in character even when not on camera during the filming of 'The Texas Chain Saw Massacre'. They became friends then and remained friends until Partain's death.
  • According to Edwin Neal (who played the hitchhiker), representatives of the Texas Highway Patrol thanked him for an 18% decrease in crime, as viewers had clearly absorbed the film's main message, which was not to pick up hitchhikers on the side of the road.
  • When the film was first released, it was so scary that many viewers didn't even make it to the end of the preview screening.
  • The film's budget was so small that Gunnar Hansen, who played Leatherface, had only one shirt. He wore it for four weeks straight – in the middle of a scorching Texas summer. By the end of filming, the smell emanating from the shirt was so strong that the rest of the crew couldn't be near Hansen (or eat near him during breaks).
  • During filming, the entire Sawyer family posed for a photo in front of the house, but a German reporter stole the shot from the set. He took the photo home, and it was later used to print posters for the film's initial release in West Germany.
  • Leatherface's mask severely limited his vision, and during filming, Gunnar Hansen regularly bumped his head on door frames, etc., due to his height (around two meters) and heels (another 7 cm).
  • Tobe Hooper heightened the atmosphere and added tension to what was happening on screen, in particular by shortening scenes immediately preceding violent ones by a few frames, or by abruptly shifting the shot to Leatherface on the right when something was happening on the left side of the frame. Cinematographer Daniel Pearl spoke about this later.
  • Serial killer and necrophile Ed Gein (who, to some extent, served as the prototype for Leatherface) wasn't entirely a serial killer, as he killed only two women. He was primarily a grave robber. He stole body parts – exclusively female – from various graves. He kept some parts at home in the refrigerator, and made clothing from the skin of one corpse, which he then wore.
  • Once, Marilyn Burns took clothing from the set to launder. Returning to the washing machine where she had loaded the clothes, the actress discovered that the shirts had been stolen. Fortunately, another shirt was found for sale at the store where they were purchased – though it was a size larger. There were no other options, so the actress bought the shirt and wore it for the remainder of filming. Soon, the shirt became so saturated with fake blood that it simply hardened.
  • Most of the actors had never met Gunnar Hansen before, let alone seen him in costume for the role, until filming their first scene with him (which was also his last).
  • In the scene where Sally tries to give her grandfather blood, the actress's finger was simply cut, as the fake blood was thickening quickly, and it was already the end of a 27-hour workday.
  • During the famous chase scene, Gunnar Hansen, the actor playing Leatherface, was instructed to portray anger and frustration. He realized that stomping his feet wouldn't convey the necessary emotions, and began swinging the chainsaw.
  • The final shot featured Leatherface sawing his own leg with a chainsaw. The actor's leg was protected by a metal plate, over which a piece of meat and a bag of fake blood were secured. The actor genuinely screamed in pain because the plate quickly heated up from contact with the chainsaw and began to burn his leg.
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