Saturday, February 2, 2008

Hollywood's Dollies

The popular perception is that that Bollywood/Kollywood (I am just going to call it Indiewood to refer to our neck of the woods) is the only place where the same actor donned multiple roles, sometimes as flimsy as playing brothers (with and without mustache) or playing father and son (ala all Sarath Kumar movies). Though multiple roles in Hollywood may not be as regular as in Indiewood, Hollywood is definitely not immune to it.

Peter Sellers' 3 roles in Dr. Strangelove or
How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (one of my all-time favorite movies), Mike Myers' 4 in Austin Powers movies and Eddie Murphy's uncountable roles in Nutty Professor spring to mind immediately. I was curious to find out if Hollywood was more prone to "cloning" than what meets the eye and below is a complete list that resulted out of a little digging. If not anything, it is worth a nice bite of trivia or an ice-breaker for that SuperBowl party this weekend.

  • Rolf Leslie - 27 parts in the life story of Queen Victoria, Sixty Years a Queen (1913).
  • Lupino Lane - 24 parts in Only Me (1929).
  • Joseph Henabery - 14 characters in the Birth of a Nation (1915).
  • Robert Hirsch - 12 roles in No Questions on Saturday (1964).
  • Michael Ripper - 9 parts in What a Crazy World (1963).
  • Sir Alec Guinness - 8 roles in Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949).
  • Eddie Murphy - 8 characters in Nutty Professor II: The Klumps (2000) and 7 characters in The Nutty Professor (1996).
  • Jerry Lewis - 7 characters in The Family Jewels (1965).
  • Peter Sellers - 6 roles in Let's Go Crazy (1951), 6 roles in Soft Beds, Hard Battles (1974) and 3 roles in Dr. Strangelove (1964) and more.
  • Scott Mosier 5 roles in Clerks
  • Vincent Perrera 5 roles in Clerks
  • Mike Myers - 4 roles in Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002).
  • Terry Thomas - 3 parts in Arabella (1969).
  • Red Skelton - 3 characters in Watch the Birdy (1930).
  • Meg Ryan - 3 roles in "Joe Versus the Volcano" (1990)

It is noteworthy that Kamal Hassan's perfect 10 in Dasavatharam or Sivaji Ganesan's near-perfect 9 in Navarathri, though not at the top of the list are definitely in the top 5.


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