The Day After - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Day After"
The Day After (1983)
Timing: 2:7 (127 min)
The Day After - TMDB rating
6.768/10
428
The Day After - Kinopoisk rating
6.857/10
5296
The Day After - IMDB rating
7/10
20000

Actors and characters

Photo Jason Robards #59841Photo Jason Robards #59842Photo Jason Robards #59843Photo Jason Robards #59844

Jason Robards

Jason Robards
Character Dr. Russell Oakes
Photo JoBeth Williams #99279Photo JoBeth Williams #99280

JoBeth Williams

JoBeth Williams
Character Nurse Nancy Bauer
Photo Steve Guttenberg #64763Photo Steve Guttenberg #64764Photo Steve Guttenberg #64765Photo Steve Guttenberg #64766

Steve Guttenberg

Steve Guttenberg
Character Stephen Klein
Photo John Cullum #105916Photo John Cullum #105917

John Cullum

John Cullum
Character Jim Dahlberg
Photo John Lithgow #8585Photo John Lithgow #8586Photo John Lithgow #8587Photo John Lithgow #8588

John Lithgow

John Lithgow
Character Joe Huxley
Photo Bibi Besch #78825

Bibi Besch

Bibi Besch
Character Eve Dahlberg
Photo Lori Lethin #109062
Lori Lethin
Character Denise Dahlberg
Photo Amy Madigan #91620Photo Amy Madigan #91621Photo Amy Madigan #91622Photo Amy Madigan #91623

Amy Madigan

Amy Madigan
Character Alison Ransom
Photo Jeff East #54481

Jeff East

Jeff East
Character Bruce Gallatin
Photo Georgann Johnson #99256Photo Georgann Johnson #99257

Georgann Johnson

Georgann Johnson
Character Helen Oakes
Photo William Allen Young #64248

William Allen Young

William Allen Young
Character Airman Billy McCoy
Photo Calvin Jung #80208

Calvin Jung

Calvin Jung
Character Dr. Sam Hachya
Photo Lin McCarthy #255087Photo Lin McCarthy #255088
Lin McCarthy
Character Dr. Austin
Photo Dennis Lipscomb #117919Photo Dennis Lipscomb #117920

Dennis Lipscomb

Dennis Lipscomb
Character Reverend Walker
Clayton Day
Character Dennis Hendry
Doug Scott
Character Danny Dahlberg
Ellen Anthony
Character Joleen Dahlberg
Kyle Aletter
Character Marilyn Oakes
Alston Ahern
Character Cynthia
William Allyn
Character Professor
Antonie Becker
Character Ellen Hendry
Pamela Brown
Character Nurse
Jonathan Estrin
Character Julian French
Photo Arliss Howard #9220

Arliss Howard

Arliss Howard
Character Tom Cooper
Rosanna Huffman
Character Dr. Wallenberg
Photo Barbara Harris #1681

Barbara Harris

Barbara Harris
Character TV Host
Bob Meister
Character Cody
Photo Vahan Moosekian #255089
Vahan Moosekian
Character Mack
Photo George Petrie #78164
George Petrie
Character Dr. Landowska
Glenn Robards
Character Barber #2
Photo Tom Spratley #80764
Tom Spratley
Character Barber #1
Stan Wilson
Character Vinnie Conrad
Arthur Ashe
Character TV Newscaster (uncredited)
Photo Billy Beck #106091

Billy Beck

Billy Beck
Character Dying Old Man Squatter (uncredited)
Brian Beltran
Character College Student (uncredited)
Bill Baker
Character College Student (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • During the period of détente between the USSR and the USA (May-June 1987), the film "The Day After" was shown on Soviet Central Television (TsTV) in the same thematic block as the Soviet film "Letters from a Dead Man." Both films were shown after the "Time" news program (the American film on the first day, "Letters..." on the second), that is, during prime time.
  • The film is quite realistic, but the scale and consequences of the disaster are nevertheless minimized, as stated in the text during the end credits.
  • In 2013, the National Geographic channel, in a series of programs called "The 80s," mentioned, when describing the film as a significant event of the 1980s, that at least three directors had refused to participate in filming the film from a completed screenplay before Nicolas Meyer. They stated that they were not prepared to film such a horrific film.
  • There is a documentary film in the USA called "First Strike," which tells about the possible beginning of World War III and actively uses footage of American military personnel from "The Day After."
  • Nicolas Meyer clashed so frequently with censors and the US government regarding the film's content, especially the scenes of violence, that he left the project during editing and requested that his name be removed from the credits. He eventually returned, but vowed never to work in television again.
  • Considering that breaking all the windows during an explosion and then replacing them all would be too wasteful, many windows were simply covered with black paper to give the impression that they were broken.
  • Producers managed to obtain footage of test launches of the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile. The Ministry of Defense prohibited the use of footage of the nuclear 'mushroom cloud' after the explosion, so the mushroom-shaped clouds were the result of work by visual effects specialists.
  • The tank in which they created the mushroom cloud after a nuclear explosion was once used in the filming of the 1982 science fiction film 'Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan,' which was also directed by Nicholas Meyer. Dyes and other liquids were slowly poured into the tank, stirred, and filmed in slow motion.
  • Some scenes with special effects, the creation of which was planned according to the original script, were never filmed because the film's duration had to be cut from four hours to two and a half. These included scenes of a nuclear explosion in Lawrence, Kansas, shown from a bird's-eye view, and an exchange of nuclear strikes between NATO and the Warsaw Pact countries in Germany.
  • Having secured the full support of the city administration of Lawrence, Kansas, the filmmakers transformed the city for several weeks into the ruins and wastelands left after a nuclear war. Windows were smashed in shops in the city center, burnt-out car hulks were placed along the streets, the streets themselves were covered with garbage and debris, and large tent camps were built for survivors on the riverbanks. Over 2,000 residents of Lawrence (including students) acted as extras, each paid $50 on the condition that they shave their heads and portray someone dying of radiation sickness. To add authenticity to the footage, the extras were asked not to wash for a while.
  • Director Nicholas Meyer wanted to cast actors completely unknown to the audience. The only one the audience knew was Jason Robards. Amy Madigan and Steve Guttenberg, who starred in Meyer's film, later became popular actors.
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