Our Hospitality - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Our Hospitality"
Our Hospitality (1923)
Timing: 1:13 (73 min)
Our Hospitality - TMDB rating
7.484/10
310
Our Hospitality - Kinopoisk rating
7.461/10
1491
Our Hospitality - IMDB rating
7.7/10
13000

Actors and characters

Photo Buster Keaton #61792Photo Buster Keaton #61793Photo Buster Keaton #61794Photo Buster Keaton #61795

Buster Keaton

Buster Keaton
Character William McKay
Photo Joe Roberts #294526Photo Joe Roberts #294527Photo Joe Roberts #294528Photo Joe Roberts #294529

Joe Roberts

Joe Roberts
Character Joseph Canfield
Photo Natalie Talmadge #206246Photo Natalie Talmadge #206247Photo Natalie Talmadge #206248Photo Natalie Talmadge #206249

Natalie Talmadge

Natalie Talmadge
Character Virginia Canfield
Craig Ward
Character Lee Canfield
Photo Joe Keaton #115582

Joe Keaton

Joe Keaton
Character The Engineer
Kitty Bradbury
Character Aunt Mary
Buster Keaton Jr.
Character Willie McKay - 1 Year Old
Photo Erwin Connelly #126888
Erwin Connelly
Character Husband Quarreling with Wife (uncredited)
Photo Edward Coxen #307921
Edward Coxen
Character John McKay (uncredited)
Photo Jack Duffy #145497

Jack Duffy

Jack Duffy
Character Sam Gardner (uncredited)
Photo Tom London #94882Photo Tom London #94883

Tom London

Tom London
Character James Canfield (uncredited)
Photo Monte Collins Sr. #294532
Monte Collins Sr.
Character The Parson

What's left behind the scenes

  • Buster Keaton (1895-1966), who never used stunt doubles during filming, nearly drowned while shooting one of the stunts when the safety rope broke and the actor fell into the river. He was found after 10 minutes lying motionless on the shore. The actor recovered from this incident, but decided to move the rest of the filming to studio sets in Los Angeles. The waterfall scene was also filmed in the studio using models. However, the stunt with his character flying on a rope towards the waterfall was filmed without doubles and on location.
  • The film used a meticulously recreated model of 'The Rocket' (one of the first locomotives, built in 1829 by George and Robert Stephenson). An equally accurate replica was the bicycle at the beginning of the film – so accurate that, according to Buster Keaton, it later became part of the Smithsonian Institution’s collection.
  • By the early 1950s, all copies of the film had been lost. In 1952, actor James Mason (1909-1984), who had bought Keaton’s former home, discovered a surviving copy of the film hidden in a secret compartment, making it available for viewing once again.
  • During filming, actor Joe Roberts (1871-1923) suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized. Roberts insisted on returning to the set and died shortly after completing work on the film.
Did you like the film?

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