A Man for All Seasons - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "A Man for All Seasons"
A Man for All Seasons (1966)
Timing: 2:0 (120 min)
A Man for All Seasons - TMDB rating
7.363/10
404
A Man for All Seasons - Kinopoisk rating
7.369/10
2914
A Man for All Seasons - IMDB rating
7.7/10
40000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

William N. Graf
Executive Producer

Casting

Robert Lennard
Casting

Editor

Ralph Kemplen
Editor

Art Direction

Costume Design

Joan Bridge
Costume Design

Production Design

John Box
Production Design

Second Unit Director

Photo Patrick Carey #145538
Patrick Carey
Second Unit Director

Makeup Artist

George Frost
Makeup Artist
Eric Allwright
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Photo Georges Delerue #1429

Georges Delerue

Georges Delerue
Original Music Composer

Production Supervisor

William Kirby
Production Supervisor

Set Dresser

Josie MacAvin
Set Dresser

Director of Photography

Ted Moore
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Bob Kindred
Camera Operator

Assistant Art Director

Roy Walker
Assistant Art Director

Screenplay

Photo Robert Bolt #90000
Robert Bolt
Screenplay

Assistant Editor

Marcel Durham
Assistant Editor

Key Grip

Michael Walter
Key Grip

Assistant Director

Peter Bolton
Assistant Director

Conductor

Sound

Buster Ambler
Sound
Bob Jones
Sound

Hairdresser

Gordon Bond
Hairdresser
Helene Bevan
Hairdresser

Construction Manager

Peter Dukelow
Construction Manager

Sound Editor

Harry Miller
Sound Editor

Wardrobe Master

Jackie Cummins
Wardrobe Master

Theatre Play

Photo Robert Bolt #90000
Robert Bolt
Theatre Play

Continuity

Constance Willis
Continuity

Technical Advisor

Patrick McLoughlin
Technical Advisor

What's left behind the scenes

  • All members of the cast had to agree to a reduction in their fees in order to keep the total film budget under $2 million. Only Orson Welles (1915-1985), Paul Scofield (1922-2008), and Suzanne York (1939-2011) received fees exceeding $10,000.
  • Orson Welles, who played the role of Cardinal Wolsey (1473-1530), used an exact replica of Wolsey's official seal, as well as authentic parchment made from sheepskin and a quill pen for writing.
  • The trial and execution scenes are based on the testimonies of eyewitnesses anonymously published on August 4, 1535.
  • Vanessa Redgrave was initially considered for the role of Margaret, but she was busy with theater. Redgrave agreed to appear on screen without pay in a cameo role as Anne Boleyn (1501-1536), but on the condition that her name would not be in the credits. However, her name is present in the final credits.
  • The filmmakers ordered several trucks of polystyrene to simulate a snowy landscape. As soon as the polystyrene arrived, the weather deteriorated and it began to snow.
  • Paul Scofield (1922-2008) did not attend the Academy Awards ceremony, believing that the Best Actor statuette would go to Richard Burton (1925-1984) for his role in Mike Nichols' (1931-2014) 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?' (1966). The award went to him, and the statuette was sent to him by mail and broken during transport.
  • The film shows that Thomas More (1478-1535) was beheaded for refusing to sign a document proclaiming the king head of the Church, as this conflicted with his beliefs. The film does not mention that More, as Lord Chancellor, knew many people whose beliefs conflicted with his, and that all those with whom he disagreed were declared heretics and burned at the stake.
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