Here Comes Mr. Jordan - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Here Comes Mr. Jordan"
Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941)
Timing: 1:34 (94 min)
Here Comes Mr. Jordan - TMDB rating
7/10
121
Here Comes Mr. Jordan - Kinopoisk rating
6.389/10
426
Here Comes Mr. Jordan - IMDB rating
7.5/10
8000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

Art Direction

Costume Design

Photo Edith Head #71922

Edith Head

Edith Head
Costume Design

Makeup Artist

Robert J. Schiffer
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Joseph Walker
Director of Photography

Screenplay

Photo Seton I. Miller #85826
Seton I. Miller
Screenplay

Assistant Director

William Mull
Assistant Director

Theatre Play

Harry Segall
Theatre Play

Music Director

What's left behind the scenes

  • The founder and president of Columbia Pictures, Harry Cohn (1891-1958), had certain doubts about this adaptation of a little-known play by Harry Segal (1892-1975). He preferred to allocate substantial budgets only to the production of films in whose future box office success he was one hundred percent confident – for example, films featuring Rita Hayworth (1918-1987). However, screenwriter Sidney Buchman (1902-1975) somehow managed to convince Cohn to allocate money for the expensive sets of the afterlife and the luxurious Farnsworth mansion, and also to borrow Robert Montgomery (1904-1981) from MGM. On top of everything, Buchman convinced Cohn that he knew what audiences would go to see in the cinema better than the Wall Street bankers to whom Cohn reported.
  • James Gleason (1882-1959) was brought onto the film's creative team primarily to help refine the dialogue. Gleason had a gift for using colloquialisms, and he also proved to be an excellent actor.
  • Harry Cohn (1891-1958), the founder and president of Columbia Pictures, had certain doubts about this adaptation of the little-known play by Harry Segal (1892-1975). He preferred to allocate substantial budgets only to the production of films in whose future box office success he was one hundred percent confident—for example, films featuring Rita Hayworth (1918-1987). However, screenwriter Sidney Buchman (1902-1975) somehow managed to convince Cohn to allocate money for the expensive sets of the afterlife and the luxurious Farnsworth mansion, and also to borrow Robert Montgomery (1904-1981) from MGM. On top of that, Buchman managed to convince Cohn that he knew what audiences would go to the cinema to see better than the Wall Street bankers to whom Cohn reported.
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