Mary Poppins - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Mary Poppins"
Mary Poppins (1964)
Timing: 2:19 (139 min)
Mary Poppins - TMDB rating
7.542/10
4969
Mary Poppins - Kinopoisk rating
7.599/10
10597
Mary Poppins - IMDB rating
7.8/10
198000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

Art Direction

William H. Tuntke
Art Direction

Stunts

Second Unit Director

Arthur J. Vitarelli
Second Unit Director

Set Decoration

Hal Gausman
Set Decoration
Emile Kuri
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Pat McNalley
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Photo Richard M. Sherman #71213

Richard M. Sherman

Richard M. Sherman
Original Music Composer
Photo Robert B. Sherman #71214

Robert B. Sherman

Robert B. Sherman
Original Music Composer

Co-Producer

Photo Bill Walsh #78218

Bill Walsh

Bill Walsh
Co-Producer

Stunt Double

May Boss
Stunt Double

Director of Photography

Edward Colman
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Travers Hill
Camera Operator

Costumer

Chuck Keehne
Costumer
Gertrude Casey
Costumer

Hairstylist

La Rue Matheron
Hairstylist

Sound Mixer

Dean Thomas
Sound Mixer

Animation

Hal Ambro
Animation

Screenplay

Novel

Book

Special Effects

Robert A. Mattey
Special Effects
Peter Ellenshaw
Special Effects

Music Supervisor

Photo Irwin Kostal #74184
Irwin Kostal
Music Supervisor

Songs

Assistant Director

Joseph L. McEveety
Assistant Director
Paul Feiner
Assistant Director

Music

Photo Irwin Kostal #74184
Irwin Kostal
Music

Music Editor

Evelyn Kennedy
Music Editor

Conductor

Photo Irwin Kostal #74184
Irwin Kostal
Conductor

Animation Director

Photo Hamilton Luske #25892

Hamilton Luske

Hamilton Luske
Animation Director

Choreographer

Marc Breaux
Choreographer
Dee Dee Wood
Choreographer
Dee Dee Wood
Choreographer

Sound Supervisor

Robert O. Cook
Sound Supervisor

Background Designer

Al Dempster
Background Designer
Art Riley
Background Designer

Don Griffith

Don Griffith
Background Designer
Bill Layne
Background Designer

Music Arranger

Photo Irwin Kostal #74184
Irwin Kostal
Music Arranger

Lyricist

Robert M. Sherman
Lyricist

Vocal Coach

Photo Dal McKennon #35596
Dal McKennon
Vocal Coach

Costume Consultant

Photo Tony Walton #78219

Tony Walton

Tony Walton
Costume Consultant

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on the story "Mary Poppins" by P.L. Travers (1934).
  • The author of the book, P.L. Travers, approved the casting of Julie Andrews in the lead role after hearing her only over the phone.
  • Walt Disney first tried to acquire the film rights from P.L. Travers in 1938. But it wasn't until 1961 that the author agreed to the deal. The film "Saving Mr. Banks" (2013) reveals the details of this story.
  • Walt Disney first tried to buy the film rights from P.L. Travers in 1938. But it wasn't until 1961 that the author agreed to the deal.
  • Walt Disney cast Julie Andrews in the lead role after seeing her performance in the Broadway musical "Camelot." Andrews informed Disney that she was pregnant, and he agreed to postpone the start of filming until after the birth and even offered her then-husband Tony Walton a job working on the costumes and some of the sets for the film. Disney personally gave the couple a tour of Disneyland. Andrews had impressed him so much in "Camelot" that he instructed the animators of "101 Dalmatians" to base Anita’s design on her (Anita was voiced by Lisa Davis).
  • The superstition that shaking hands with a chimney sweep brings good luck is based on the following: during their work, chimney sweeps inhale coal dust, which means their lives are usually short, and their final years (when they can no longer work) are spent in poverty. It is believed that the luck denied to chimney sweeps themselves can pass on to other people.
  • The chimney sweeps' dance on the rooftops to the song “Step in Time” had to be reshot due to a scratched film reel. An entire week was spent filming this episode.
  • When Dave Smith, the head of archives at Walt Disney Company, decided to find the glass globe (inside which was a model of St. Paul's Cathedral, and birds were flying around), which appeared in the film, the globe was found in a janitor's closet. It turned out the janitor had seen it in the trash can and decided it was too beautiful to throw away.
  • The roles of many candidates for the governess position, shown in the line at the beginning of the film, were played by men in wigs.
  • Matthew Garber, who played Michael, was paid an extra ten cents for each take of the tea party scene. The young actor was afraid of heights, so this unusual bonus was offered to him.
  • Dick Van Dyke had already been cast as Bert when he read the film's script, but he liked the role of Mr. Dawes Sr. so much that he went directly to Walt Disney and asked to play it, even offering to do so without pay. Disney granted his request, but first tested the actor in the role of Dawes Sr., and then asked him to make a donation to the California Institute of the Arts (one of the best art schools in the US, founded on Disney's initiative in 1961).
  • The scene in which Mr. Dawes Sr. (played by Dick Van Dyke) descends a step into the bank's conference room was not in the script. One day, Walt Disney, watching from the projection booth, saw the actor fooling around with the crew, specifically portraying an old man who couldn't bring himself to step off the curb for fear of falling. This episode convinced Disney to give the actor the role of the bank chairman in addition to Bert. Moreover, he asked the set workers to build a high step in the conference room set so Van Dyke could repeat the act with the old man on the curb.
  • Matte painting (combining real footage and a painted image in a single frame, i.e., one of the combined shooting techniques) was used to recreate the outlines of London's rooftops in 1910.
  • The cherry blossoms shown in the film were plastic, brought from France and Portugal. They were attached to the trees by hand.
  • The wires that allowed Mary Poppins to fly were specially coated with shoe polish to prevent them from reflecting the spotlights.
  • It is said that the author of the book and screenwriter, Pamela L. Travers, approved the casting of Julie Andrews as Mary Poppins, however, she disliked the resulting film so much that she left the premiere in tears. She was reportedly most upset by the decision to make Mary Poppins not cold and frightening, but warm and friendly.
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.