The Witches of Eastwick - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Witches of Eastwick"
The Witches of Eastwick (1987)
Timing: 1:58 (118 min)
The Witches of Eastwick - TMDB rating
6.5/10
1335
The Witches of Eastwick - Kinopoisk rating
7.265/10
42400
The Witches of Eastwick - IMDB rating
6.6/10
84000

Actors and characters

Photo Jack Nicholson #43418Photo Jack Nicholson #43419Photo Jack Nicholson #43420Photo Jack Nicholson #43421

Jack Nicholson

Jack Nicholson
Character Daryl Van Horne
Photo Cher #99434Photo Cher #99435Photo Cher #99436Photo Cher #99437

Cher

Cher
Character Alexandra Medford
Photo Susan Sarandon #66389Photo Susan Sarandon #66390Photo Susan Sarandon #66391Photo Susan Sarandon #66392

Susan Sarandon

Susan Sarandon
Character Jane Spofford
Photo Michelle Pfeiffer #8838Photo Michelle Pfeiffer #8839Photo Michelle Pfeiffer #8840Photo Michelle Pfeiffer #8841

Michelle Pfeiffer

Michelle Pfeiffer
Character Sukie Ridgemont
Photo Veronica Cartwright #41406Photo Veronica Cartwright #41407Photo Veronica Cartwright #41408Photo Veronica Cartwright #41409

Veronica Cartwright

Veronica Cartwright
Character Felicia Alden
Photo Richard Jenkins #39799Photo Richard Jenkins #39800Photo Richard Jenkins #39801Photo Richard Jenkins #39802

Richard Jenkins

Richard Jenkins
Character Clyde Alden
Photo Keith Jochim #105183
Keith Jochim
Character Walter Neff
Photo Helen Lloyd Breed #80003

Helen Lloyd Breed

Helen Lloyd Breed
Character Mrs. Biddle
Caroline Struzik
Character Carol Medford
Michele Sincavage
Character Ridgemont Child
Photo Harriet Medin #67279
Harriet Medin
Character Woman at Market
Photo Jane A. Johnston #105184
Jane A. Johnston
Character Woman at Market
Photo Merrily Horowitz #105185
Merrily Horowitz
Character Woman at Market
Photo Babbie Green #105186
Babbie Green
Character Woman at Market
Photo Becca Lish #105187
Becca Lish
Character Mrs. Neff
Photo Margot Dionne #105188
Margot Dionne
Character Nurse
Photo Eugene Boles #61500
Eugene Boles
Character Minister
John Blood
Character Deli Counterman

What's left behind the scenes

  • Initially, the role of Alexandra, which ultimately went to Cher, was to be played by Susan Sarandon.
  • 'The Witches of Eastwick' is a film adaptation of a work by John Updike.
  • Initially, Daryl Van Horne was to be played by Bill Murray.
  • Angelica Huston auditioned for the role of Alexandra.
  • When the studio discussed possible ways to reduce the film's budget, George Miller offered to give up his personal trailer, arguing that the director was constantly needed on set and therefore had no need for it. The studio bosses saw this as a weakness and began to actively interfere with the director's production requests. For example, if Miller requested 50 units of some prop, the studio would provide only a dozen. If he requested two cameras, the studio would provide one. Miller decided to 'fight fire with fire' and began refusing to shoot scenes for which requests were not fully met. The studio responded by beginning a search for a new director. Jack Nicholson saved George Miller from being fired, supporting the director and publicly vowing to leave the project if Miller was replaced.
  • The whistling of Daryl Van Horne in the scene at the ice cream vendor was whistled by the film's composer, John Williams, himself.
  • The snake featured in one of the film's scenes is a completely harmless gray-banded kingsnake (Lampropeltis alterna), which is a common sight in Texas.
  • During test screenings, audiences were so dissatisfied with the original ending of the film that several alternative endings had to be shot.
  • The piece Daryl Van Horne plays on the violin is Caprice No. 16 in G minor by Niccolò Paganini.
  • The line “A woman is a hole, isn’t that what they say? All the futility of the world flows into it” is a quote from the book by French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, *Being and Nothingness*.
  • The character Walter Neff's name is a reference to the famous film noir by Billy Wilder, "Double Indemnity" (1944), where the protagonist has the same name.
  • The episode in which one of the heroines falls from a balcony is a quote from Richard Donner's classic horror film "The Omen" (1976).
  • Angelica Huston's transformation into the Grand Witch took 8 hours in the makeup chair.
  • When the boys were turned into mice, rats and puppets were used to play their roles.
  • The props department, led by Jim Henson (1936-1990), created mouse models of various sizes. Size A creatures were the size of real mice and were controlled using thin wires. Size B mice resembled large rats and were also controlled with wires. Size C mice were almost a meter tall and were operated manually. The latter were used in only a few scenes, as director Nicolas Roeg decided that it would be too difficult to combine a close-up of a person and such a mouse during editing. Roeg preferred to work with a single frame width, so smaller mouse models in reduced sets were most often used.
  • The snowy landscape against which the opening credits appear was filmed in Ulvik, a center of the Hordaland commune in Norway.
  • The Headland Hotel in Newquay, UK, served as the Hotel Excelsior.
  • Cher, Eartha Kitt, Geneviève Bujold, Ann Bancroft, Sigourney Weaver, Linda Blair, Faye Dunaway, Susan Sarandon, Jodie Foster, Vanessa Redgrave, Frances Conroy, and Liza Minnelli were considered for the role of the Grand Witch.
  • Mostly men in disguise played the witches at the gathering in the hotel.
  • For the British release, a couple of scenes from the film (featuring the witch's face and Bruno's transformation into a mouse) had to be re-edited to allow the British Board of Film Classification to grant it a PG rating (all ages are admitted, but parental guidance is suggested).
  • Neither the novel nor the film explains why the witches hate children so much, or why the Grand Witch intends to get rid of all the children in the country.
  • In addition to a happy ending, an alternate ending more faithful to the original book was filmed. Both versions were shown to test groups. It turned out that the audience preferred the happy ending.
  • "The Witches of Eastwick" is a film adaptation of a work by John Updike.
  • When the studio discussed possible ways to reduce the film's budget, George Miller offered to give up his personal trailer, arguing that the director was constantly needed on set and therefore had no use for it. The studio bosses saw this as a weakness and began to actively interfere with the director's production requests. For example, if Miller requested 50 units of some props, the studio would provide only a dozen. If he requested two cameras, the studio would provide one. Miller decided to "fight fire with fire" and began refusing to shoot scenes for which requests were not fully met. The studio responded by starting to search for a new director. Jack Nicholson saved George Miller from being fired, supporting the director and publicly vowing to leave the project if Miller were replaced.
  • The line, "A woman is a hole, isn't that what they say? All the emptiness of the world flows into it," is a quote from the book by French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, "Being and Nothingness."
  • The name of the character Walter Neff is a reference to the famous film noir by Billy Wilder, "Double Indemnity" (1944), where the protagonist has the same name.
  • The scene in which one of the heroines falls from the balcony is a quote from Richard Donner's classic horror film "The Omen" (1976).
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