His Girl Friday - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "His Girl Friday"
His Girl Friday (1940)
Timing: 1:32 (92 min)
His Girl Friday - TMDB rating
7.4/10
912
His Girl Friday - Kinopoisk rating
7.374/10
8696
His Girl Friday - IMDB rating
7.8/10
68000

Actors and characters

Photo Cary Grant #82590Photo Cary Grant #82591Photo Cary Grant #82592Photo Cary Grant #82593

Cary Grant

Cary Grant
Character Walter Burns
Photo Rosalind Russell #102912Photo Rosalind Russell #102913Photo Rosalind Russell #102914Photo Rosalind Russell #102915

Rosalind Russell

Rosalind Russell
Character Hildy Johnson
Photo Ralph Bellamy #34837Photo Ralph Bellamy #34838Photo Ralph Bellamy #34839Photo Ralph Bellamy #34840

Ralph Bellamy

Ralph Bellamy
Character Bruce Baldwin
Photo Gene Lockhart #44682

Gene Lockhart

Gene Lockhart
Character Sheriff Hartwell
Photo Helen Mack #102921Photo Helen Mack #102922Photo Helen Mack #102923Photo Helen Mack #102924

Helen Mack

Helen Mack
Character Mollie Malloy
Photo Porter Hall #44674Photo Porter Hall #44675Photo Porter Hall #44676

Porter Hall

Porter Hall
Character Murphy
Photo Ernest Truex #102926Photo Ernest Truex #102927
Ernest Truex
Character Bensinger
Photo Cliff Edwards #33111Photo Cliff Edwards #33112

Cliff Edwards

Cliff Edwards
Character Endicott
Photo Clarence Kolb #102928

Clarence Kolb

Clarence Kolb
Character Mayor
Photo Roscoe Karns #102929Photo Roscoe Karns #102930Photo Roscoe Karns #102931Photo Roscoe Karns #102932

Roscoe Karns

Roscoe Karns
Character McCue
Photo Frank Jenks #102935
Frank Jenks
Character Wilson
Photo Regis Toomey #102936Photo Regis Toomey #102937Photo Regis Toomey #102938

Regis Toomey

Regis Toomey
Character Sanders
Photo Abner Biberman #102939Photo Abner Biberman #102940
Abner Biberman
Character Louie
Photo Frank Orth #102941

Frank Orth

Frank Orth
Character Duffy
Photo John Qualen #102257Photo John Qualen #102258Photo John Qualen #102259Photo John Qualen #102260

John Qualen

John Qualen
Character Earl Williams
Photo Alma Kruger #102942Photo Alma Kruger #102943

Alma Kruger

Alma Kruger
Character Mrs. Baldwin
Photo Billy Gilbert #32492Photo Billy Gilbert #32493

Billy Gilbert

Billy Gilbert
Character Joe Pettibone

Pat West

Pat West
Character Warden Cooley
Photo Edwin Maxwell #94887Photo Edwin Maxwell #94888

Edwin Maxwell

Edwin Maxwell
Character Dr. Egelhoffer
Photo Irving Bacon #54321

Irving Bacon

Irving Bacon
Character Gus (uncredited)
Photo Wade Boteler #102944Photo Wade Boteler #102945Photo Wade Boteler #102946

Wade Boteler

Wade Boteler
Character Mike (uncredited)
Photo Harry C. Bradley #102947

Harry C. Bradley

Harry C. Bradley
Character Insurance Doctor (uncredited)
Photo Wheaton Chambers #102948

Wheaton Chambers

Wheaton Chambers
Character Elevator Passenger (uncredited)
Photo Edmund Cobb #2433
Edmund Cobb
Character Cop (uncredited)
Photo Ann Doran #102949

Ann Doran

Ann Doran
Character Newspaper Office Worker (uncredited)
Photo Ralph Dunn #100906

Ralph Dunn

Ralph Dunn
Character Plainclothesman (uncredited)
Photo Earl Dwire #102950
Earl Dwire
Character Pete Davis (uncredited)
Photo Pat Flaherty #94395

Pat Flaherty

Pat Flaherty
Character Frank the Policeman (uncredited)
Jack Gardner
Character Elevator Passenger (uncredited)
Eddie Hart
Character Carl the Plainclothesman (uncredited)
Photo Marion Martin #102951Photo Marion Martin #102952Photo Marion Martin #102953

Marion Martin

Marion Martin
Character Evangeline (uncredited)
Photo Frank McLure #2474

Frank McLure

Frank McLure
Character Newsman (uncredited)
Photo James Millican #102954Photo James Millican #102955

James Millican

James Millican
Character Tim (uncredited)
Photo Gene Morgan #102956
Gene Morgan
Character Gene (uncredited)
Photo Delmar Watson #102957
Delmar Watson
Character Skinny (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • At the end of the film, Walter mentions a man named Archie Leach, which is Cary Grant's real name.
  • It is estimated that lines in a typical film are spoken at an average rate of 90 words per minute. In Howard Hawks' (1896-1977) screwball comedies, the average rate reaches 240 words per minute.
  • One of the first films – the very first being Gregory La Cava's (1892-1952) 'Stage Door' (1937) – in which characters speak over each other, before the other character has finished their line, was done to make everything look and sound more realistic. Previously, characters always let their scene partners finish speaking before starting their own line.
  • Rosalind Russell (1907-1976) disliked that her character had fewer quality lines than the character played by Cary Grant (1904-1986), so with the help of her brother she enlisted the services of an advertising slogan and copywriter, who slightly altered the lines written for her character. This went unnoticed by Hawks, who allowed his actors to improvise, as well as by the crew and other actors, with the exception of Grant.
  • Filming wrapped up several days later than planned. The delay was caused by the difficulty of shooting dialogue scenes where lines were spoken very quickly and had to be delivered at a specific moment to coincide with the visuals. Four days were spent filming the restaurant scene where Hildy and Bruce are invited. Initially, only two days were allocated for filming this scene.
  • To record sound (and specifically, rapid exchanges of dialogue), Hawks decided to use not one microphone held to the actors on a boom, but multiple microphones. Since the microphones were not switched on simultaneously, a dedicated sound engineer would turn them on in sequence. Up to 35 microphones were used simultaneously in one scene.
  • There was a lot of improvisation during filming, which seriously complicated the work of cinematographer Joseph Walker (1892-1985). It was especially difficult to film Rosalind Russell in a way that she looked perfect on screen, as Walker didn't know in advance exactly where she would be in any given scene. The actress had a prominent lower jaw, which required lighting during filming. In the end, Walker solved this problem by asking Russell's makeup artist to shade the actress's jawline, so that she could be filmed without any further issues.
  • The scene in which Walter and Hildy hide the criminal in the newsroom was based on a real-life case where an editor of The New York Evening Graphic hid a fugitive criminal in the newsroom, interviewed him, wrote an article about it, waited for sales of that issue of the newspaper to begin, and only then handed the criminal over to the police.
Did you like the film?

© ACMODASI, 2010-2026

All rights reserved.
The materials (trademarks, videos, images and text) contained on this site are the property of their respective owners. It is forbidden to use any materials from this site without prior agreement with their owner.
When copying text and graphic materials (videos, images, text, screenshots of pages) from this site, an active link to the site www.acmodasi.in must necessarily accompany such material.
We are not responsible for any information posted on this site by third parties.