Ben-Hur (1959)

Who's Dated Who feature on Ben-Hur including trivia, quotes, cast, crew, photos, pics, news, reviews, soundtracks, commentary, fans and pictures.
 

Ben-Hur Cast

 

Full Cast and Crew

 

Awards

Ben-Hur (1959) was nominated for the following awards:

Academy Awards

1.
Oscar
1960
Best Actor in a Leading Role
Won  

Golden Globes

2.
Golden Globe
1960
Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama
Nominated  

Laurel Awards

3.
Golden Laurel
1960
Top Male Dramatic Performance

Fotogramas de Plata

4.
Fotogramas de Plata
1960
Best Foreign Performer (Mejor intérprete de cine extranjero)
Won  
 

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Trivia

Quotes
  • Judah Ben-Hur: If you were not a bride, I would kiss you goodbye. Esther: If I were not a bride, there would be no goodbyes to be said.
  • 1st Jailer: [looking in records] Miriam, wife... Tirzah, daughter. Drusus: Yes, that`s them. Are they alive? 1st Jailer: [examining the records, he is pessimistic] East section... lower level. The jailer in that wing will know. [Drusus is led down various passages into the lower dungeons] Drusus: How long since you`ve seen them? 2nd Jailer: Never - and I`ve been here three years. But they`re alive, all right. 2nd Jailer: [after demonstrating a slot in the bottom of the cell door] The food disappears.
  • Simonides: Judah Ben Hur! You`ve come back to us like a returning faith! Oh Judah, I should like to laugh again. Let us laugh! Judah Ben-Hur: We will laugh. Simonides: There will be joy again in this house! We will celebrate! Among the dust and cobwebs... [sobs]
  • Sheik Ilderim: Balthasar is a good man. But until all men are like him, we must keep our swords bright! Judah Ben-Hur: And our intentions true! So I must leave you. Sheik Ilderim: One last thought: There is no law in the arena; many are killed... I hope to see you again, Judah Ben-Hur.
  • Judah Ben-Hur: When the Romans were marching me to the galleys, thirst had nearly killed me. A man gave me water to drink, and I went on living. I should have done better if I`d poured it into the sand! Balthasar: No. Judah Ben-Hur: I`m thirsty still.
  • Pontius Pilate: A grown man knows the world he lives in. For the moment, that world is Rome.
  • Quintus Arrius: In his eagerness to save you, your god has also saved the Roman fleet.
  • Quintus Arrius: Now listen to me, all of you. You are all condemned men. We keep you alive to serve this ship. So row well, and live
  • Messala: By condemning without hesitation an old friend, I shall be feared.
  • Sextus: You can break a man`s skull, you can arrest him, you can throw him into a dungeon. But how do you control what`s up here? [taps his head] Sextus: How do you fight an idea?
  • Quintus Arrius: Your eyes are full of hate, forty-one. That`s good. Hate keeps a man alive. It gives him strength.
  • [last lines] Judah Ben-Hur: Almost at the moment He died, I heard Him say, "Father, forgive them for they know not what they do." Esther: Even then. Judah Ben-Hur: Even then. And I felt His voice take the sword out of my hand.
  • Esther: Oh, Judah, rest. Sleep. For a few hours of the night, let your mind be at peace. Judah Ben-Hur: [bitterly] Peace! Love and peace. Do you think I don`t long for them as you do? Where do you see them? Esther: If you had heard this man from Nazareth... Judah Ben-Hur: Balthasar`s word. Esther: He is more than Balthasar`s word. His voice traveled with such a still purpose... It was more than a voice... a man more than a man! He said, "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God." Judah Ben-Hur: Children of God? In that dead valley where we left them? I tell you every man in Judea is unclean, and will *stay* unclean, until we`ve scoured off our bodies the crust and filth of being at the mercy of tyranny. No other life is possible except to wash this land clean! Esther: In blood? Judah Ben-Hur: Yes, in blood! Esther: I know there is a law in life, that blood gets more blood as dog begets dog. Death generates death, as the vulture breeds the vulture! But the voice I heard today on the hill said, "Love your enemy. Do good to those who despitefully use you." Judah Ben-Hur: So all who are born in this land hereafter can suffer as we have done! Esther: As you make us do now? Are we to bear nothing together? Even love? Judah Ben-Hur: I can hardly draw breath without feeling you in my heart. Yet I know that everything I do from this moment will be as great a pain to you as you have ever suffered. It is better not to love me! Esther: It was Judah Ben-Hur I loved. What has become of him? You seem to be now the very thing you set out to destroy, giving evil for evil! Hatred is turning you to stone. It is as though you had become Messala! [Judah looks at her, shocked] Esther: [sadly] I`ve lost you, Judah.
  • Judah Ben-Hur: I must deal with Messala in my own way. Balthasar: And your way is to kill him. [Judah`s reaction indicates Balthasar is correct, as Sheik Ilderim looks on with dismay] Balthasar: I see this terrible thing in your eyes, Judah Ben-Hur, but no matter what this man has done to you, you have no right to take his life. He will be punished inevitably. Judah Ben-Hur: I don`t believe in miracles. Balthasar: Your whole life is a miracle! Why will you not accept God`s judgement?
  • Balthasar: Pardon me - you are a stranger here. Would you be from Nazareth? Judah Ben-Hur: Why do you ask? Balthasar: I thought... you might be the one... the one I have come back from my country to find. He would be about your age. Judah Ben-Hur: Who? Balthasar: When I find him, I shall know him.
  • Messala: By what magic do you bear the name of a Consul of Rome? Judah Ben-Hur: You were the magician, Messala.
  • Esther: It is as though you have become Messala!
  • [Judah confronts Esther and Malluch in the Valley of the Lepers] Judah Ben-Hur: [angrily, to Esther] Why did you tell me they were dead? Esther: It was what they wanted. Judah, you must not betray this faith. Will you do this for them? Judah Ben-Hur: Not to see them? Esther: [seeing Miriam and Tirzah approach] They are coming... Judah! Judah, love them in the way they most need to be loved: not to look at them! Judah, let it be as though you had never come here. Please, Judah! [Judah hides behind a boulder as Esther goes to meet Miriam] Miriam: Is Judah well? Is he happy? [Judah`s face twists in anguish over hearing his mother`s voice, yet having to hide from her after years of separation] Esther: Yes. He is well. Your mind can be at rest for him. He is well, Miriam. Miriam: I am content. [she picks up the basket of food that Esther brought for them] Miriam: God be with you. [she and Tirzah go back into the cave] Esther: [going back to Judah] They are gone. We can go back. Judah Ben-Hur: [bitterly] Go back... to what? Esther: Judah, they have one blessing left: to think you remember them as they were. Live your own life. Forget what is here. Judah Ben-Hur: Forget? Forget? It`s as if they were alive in a grave! Esther: But what can you do? Judah Ben-Hur: Undo what you`ve done! How could you have suffered them to come here? I must see them! Esther: No Judah, please! Judah! [Judah starts toward the cave but is stopped by Malluch] Esther: Oh, think, Judah, *think*! It will tear them apart if they see you!
  • Sheik Ilderim: One God, that I can understand; but one wife? That is not civilized. [nudges Judah] Sheik Ilderim: It is not generous!
  • Sheik Ilderim: Was the food not to your liking? Judah Ben-Hur: Oh, indeed! [Balthasar gestures for Judah to burp in gratitude, and Judah burps]
  • Quintus Arrius: [a galley`s 200 rowers are gradually told to increase their pace] Battle speed!... Attack speed!... Ramming speed!
  • [first lines] Balthasar: [narrating] In the Year of our Lord, Judea - for nearly a century - had lain under the mastery of Rome. In the seventh year of the reign of Augustus Caesar, an imperial decree ordered every Judean each to return to his place of birth to be counted and taxed. The converging ways of many of them led to the gates of their capital city, Jerusalem, the troubled heart of their land. The old city was dominated by the fortress of Antonia, the seat of Roman power, and by the great golden temple, the outward sign of an inward and imperishable faith. Even while they obeyed the will of Caesar, the people clung proudly to their ancient heritage, always remembering the promise of their prophets that one day there would be born among them a redeemer to bring them salvation and perfect freedom.
  • Messala: [greedily] Drusus, as a boy I dreamed of commanding this garrison... And now the wheel has turned; I *am* in command.
  • Miriam: As though He were carrying in that Cross the pain of the world. [whispers] Miriam: So fearful. Tirzah: And yet why is it... I`m not afraid anymore?
  • Balthasar: [during the Crucifixion] I have lived too long.
  • Sheik Ilderim: You think you can treat my horses like animals?
  • Miriam: [hesitating before leaving the cave that has been her home] I`m afraid. Esther: [embracing her in encouragement] No cause. The world is more than we know.
  • Messala: Sextus, you ask how to fight an idea. Well I`ll tell you how... with another idea!
  • Judah Ben-Hur: He gave me water, and the heart to live. What has he done to merit this? Balthasar: He has taken the world of our sins onto Himself. To this end He said He was born, in that stable, where I first saw Him. For this cause, He came into the world. Judah Ben-Hur: For this death? Balthasar: For this beginning.
  • Tiberius Caesar: [about Ben-Hur] This man riding beside you, who is he? Quintus Arrius: The man who saved me, divine Emperor, to return and serve you. Tiberius Caesar: Is that all you know of him? Quintus Arrius: No. He was accused of an attack on the governor of Judea. But he was innocent. Tiberius Caesar: If not, there is a strange inconsistency in this man, who tries to kill my governor, yet saves the life of my consul. Come tomorrow, and we will talk of him.
  • Judah Ben-Hur: If I cannot persuade them, that does not mean I will help you... *murder* them. Besides, you must understand this, Messala. I believe in the past of my people, *and* in their future. Messala: Future? You are a conquered people! Judah Ben-Hur: You may conquer the land; you may slaughter the people. But that is not the end. We will rise again.
  • Messala: Look to the West, Judah! Don`t be a fool, look to Rome! Judah Ben-Hur: I would rather be a fool than a traitor... or a killer! Messala: I am a soldier! Judah Ben-Hur: Yes! Who kills! For Rome! Rome is evil! Messala: I warn you... Judah Ben-Hur: No! I warn you! Rome is an affront to God! Rome is strangling my people and my country, the whole Earth! But not forever. I tell you the day Rome falls there will be a shout of freedom such as the world has never heard before!
  • Quintus Arrius: [startled from sleep to see Judah standing over his bed] Why are you here? Judah Ben-Hur: I was ordered to report to you during my relief. Quintus Arrius: Yes, I had forgotten... You could have killed me as I lay there! You`re a condemned man, why didn`t you? Judah Ben-Hur: I`m not ready to die. Quintus Arrius: What do you think will save you? Judah Ben-Hur: The God of my fathers. Quintus Arrius: Your God has forsaken you. He has no more power than the images I pray to. My Gods do not help me; your God will not help you.
  • [on Arrius` orders, the guard has removed the chain from Judah`s shackles prior to the battle] Rower No. 42: Forty-one, why did he do that? Judah Ben-Hur: I don`t know. Once before, a man helped me. I didn`t know why then.
  • Neighbor: You`re not watching the soldiers, Joseph? Joseph: We`ve seen Romans before. Neighbor: Yes. And we will see them again. [the neighbor examines some boards which have not been assembled] Neighbor: My table is not finished. Where is your son? Joseph: He`s walking in the hills. Neighbor: [disapproving] Mm-hm. He neglects his work, Joseph. Joseph: No. Once I reproached him with forgetting his work. He said to me, "I must be about my Father`s business." Neighbor: Then why isn`t he here, working? Joseph: [smiling] He`s working.
  • Centurion: There`s a Jew outside. He wants to see the Tribune Messala. Messala: I assume he has a name. Centurion: [sneeringly] He says he`s a prince - Prince Judah Ben-Hur. Messala: [loud and angry] THEN TREAT HIM LIKE ONE! [quietly] Messala: Tell him I`ll join him. [the centurion turns to leave, and Messala shouts again] Messala: CENTURION! [Again quietly] Messala: This was his country before it was ours. Don`t forget that. Centurion: Yes, Tribune. [He goes out] Sextus: That was very wise. This Judah Ben-Hur is the son of one of the wealthiest families in Judea.
  • [Judah, Esther, Miriam and Tirzah enter the city to find it deserted except for a blind beggar] Judah Ben-Hur: [to Blind Man] Why are the streets deserted? Blind Man: They have gone to the trial. Alms for the blind? Judah Ben-Hur: Trial? Whose trial? Blind Man: The young rabbi from Nazareth. They are wanting his death. Esther: It cannot be true! Blind Man: [holding out his cup] Alms? Judah Ben-Hur: What has he done? Blind Man: Nothing I know of. For the blind? For the blind? Help for the blind? [Judah drops a coin in his cup]
  • [Christ passes, bearing the cross] Esther: How can this be? Judah Ben-Hur: [shocked] I *know* this man! [Jesus stumbles and is whipped by the centurions] Miriam: [pleading] Won`t someone help him? [Jesus is whipped again] Tirzah: Have pity on him! Miriam: [wonderingly] In his pain... there`s a look of peace. Judah Ben-Hur: Watch over them, Esther. [he goes after Jesus] Miriam: We must go back. Esther: [sadly] I brought you here to this... when I hoped... Miriam: [looking after Christ] You haven`t failed, Esther.
  • Judah Ben-Hur: [after he is sentenced to the galleys] May God grant me vengeance! I will pray that you live until I return! Messala: [ironically] Return?
  • Messala: You`re either for me or against me! Judah Ben-Hur: If that is the choice, then I am against you.
  • Sheik Ilderim: [about his wives] I`ve got six... no, seven. Balthasar: I have counted eight, and that is because he is traveling. At home, he has more.
  • Judah Ben-Hur: You sent for me? Pontius Pilate: I hope I bring you a good conclusion to your victory. I have a message for you from the consul, your father. Judah Ben-Hur: I honor him. Pontius Pilate: As you may honor yourself. You have been made a citizen of Rome. [pause] Pontius Pilate: Do you say nothing to this? Judah Ben-Hur: I have just come from the Valley of Stone where my mother and my sister live what`s left of their lives. By Rome`s will, lepers, outcasts without hope! Pontius Pilate: I have heard this. There was great blame there, very deeply regretted. Judah Ben-Hur: Their flesh is mine, m`lord Pilate. It already carries Rome`s mark. Pontius Pilate: Messala is dead. What he did has had its way with him. Judah Ben-Hur: The deed was not Messala`s. I knew him, well, before the cruelty of Rome spread in his blood. Rome destroyed Messala as surely as Rome has destroyed my family. Pontius Pilate: Where there is greatness, great government or power, even great feeling or compassion, error also is great. We progress and mature by fault. But Rome has said she is ready to join your life to hers in a great future. Judah Ben-Hur: There are other voices. Pontius Pilate: The voice for instance of Arrius, waiting for you in Rome. He would tell you, if I may speak in his place, not to crucify yourself on a shadow such as old resentment or impossible loyalties. Perfect freedom has no existence. A grown man knows the world he lives in, and for the present, the world is Rome. Young Arrius, I am sure, will choose it. Judah Ben-Hur: I am Judah Ben-Hur. [long pause; Pilate turns and walks away a few steps, then gestures] Pontius Pilate: I crossed this floor in spoken friendship, as I would speak to Arrius. But when I go up those stairs I become the hand of Caesar, ready to crush all those who challenge his authority. There are too many small men of envy and ambition who try to disrupt the government of Rome. You have become the victor and hero to these people. They look to you, their one true god as I called you. If you stay here, you will find yourself part of this tragedy. Judah Ben-Hur: I am already part of this tragedy. [he takes off Arrius` ring] Judah Ben-Hur: Return this to Arrius. I honor him too well to wear it any longer. Pontius Pilate: [taking the ring] Even for the sake of Arrius, I cannot protect you from personal disaster if you stay here. You are too great a danger. [he turns away and walks up the stairs to the governor`s throne] Pontius Pilate: Leave Judea. You have my warning. [Ben-Hur exits]
    Trivia
  • MGM wanted an authentic-looking Roman boat for the live battle scenes. To design the boats, they hired a person who had spent his whole career studying Roman naval architecture. When he presented his designs to the MGM engineers, Mauro Zambuto (set engineer) exclaimed, "But this is top heavy! It will sink!" They built the boat anyway and launched it in the ocean, and at first it seemed to float. Then however, a little wave came along, a wake from another boat, splashed against the highly unstable boat, and tipped it over. MGM then put the boat in a large pond with a huge painted sky backdrop. To steady the boat, they ran cables from the bottom of the boat to anchors on the bottom of the pond.
  • Another problem concerned the color of the water in the pond holding the boat; it was too brown and murky. They hired a chemist to develop a dye to color the water Azure Mediterranean blue. The chemist dumped a huge sack of some powder into the pond, which, instead of turning the water blue, formed a hard crust on the surface of the water, which had to be chiselled off the boat at great expense. They finally found some dye that would make the water blue. During one of the battle scenes, an extra who fell into the water and spent a bit too much time there turned blue, and was kept on the MGM payroll until it wore off.
  • When it came time to film inside the boat, it was discovered that the large 65mm cameras wouldn`t fit. The boat had to be taken out of the pond, cut in half lengthwise, and placed in an Italian sound stage. The oars wouldn`t fit in the sound stage, so they had to cut them off just beyond the hull. This resulted in an extremely light oars which, when rowed by the actors, didn`t look believable, since you could move them with one hand. To solve the problem, Mauro Zambuto sent an army of production assistants to all of the hardware stores in Rome to buy the kind of spring-and-hydraulic piston mechanisms that are normally attached to doors to force them closed but to keep them from slamming. Placing these devices on the oars and the hull gave enough resistance to make the rowing scenes look realistic.
  • Although there were presumably white horses in Italy, the white horses used in the film were brought in from Lipica, Slovenia, the original home of the snow-white "Lipizzaner" horse breed. Glenn H. Randall Sr. trained 78 horses for the film, starting months before photography began.
  • The film used over 1,000,000 props.
  • Over 300 sets were built for the film.
  • Shot over a period of nine months at Rome`s Cinecitta studio. The outdoor sets built for the chariot race were the largest built at the time.
  • Initially there were queries over whether William Wyler was the right director for the job, as he`d never tackled a film of this scale before. One of the doubters was Wyler himself.
  • Featured more crew and extras than any other film ever made before it. There were 15,000 extras alone for the chariot race sequence.
  • # # By the time filming had finished, MGM`s London laboratories had processed over 1,250,000 feet of 65mm Eastman Color film, at the cost of $1 a foot.
  • # # Charlton Heston was taught to drive a chariot by the stunt crew, who offered to teach the entire cast. Heston was the only one who took them up on the offer. At the beginning of the chariot race, Heston shook the reins and nothing happened; the horses remained motionless. Finally someone way up on top of the set yelled, "Giddy-up!" The horses then roared into action, and Heston was flung backward off of the chariot.
  • # # The chariot race segment was directed by legendary stuntman Yakima Canutt. Joe Canutt (Yak`s son) doubled for Charlton Heston. During one of the crashes, in which Judah Ben-Hur`s horses jump over a crashed chariot, the younger Canutt was thrown from his chariot onto the tongue of his chariot. He managed to climb back into his chariot and bring it back under control. The sequence looked so good that it was included in the film, with a close-up of Heston climbing back into the chariot. Canutt got a slight cut on his chin, but it was the only injury in the incredibly dangerous sequence.
  • # # The design of the stadium was another major bone of contention. MGM asked an archaeologist what the stadium in Jerusalem had looked like. "Roman," came the reply. A second archaeologist was asked. "It was in a Phoenician style," he said. A third archaeologist was consulted, who said: "Stadium? I was not aware that Jerusalem had one!" MGM engineers eventually sat down and carefully studied Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925), and based their design on that.
  • # # The large "island" in the stadium was great for filming, since a backdrop of a stone wall is cheaper to film than a backdrop of thousands of extras. However, such an "island" in a real stadium prevents spectators from viewing the race properly at all angles and would not normally exist.
  • # # When the production was over, MGM was afraid that small-time local Italian producers would use the leftover sets as backgrounds to their own low-budget epics, so they destroyed all of the sets.
  • Miklós Rózsa wrote the musical score in eight weeks.
  • # # The chariot race has a 263-to-1 cutting ratio (263 feet of film for every one foot kept), probably the highest for any 65mm sequence ever filmed.
  • Burt Lancaster, a self-described atheist, claimed he turned down the role of Judah Ben-Hur because he "didn`t like the violent morals in the story" and because he did not want to promote Christianity.
  • Cesare Danova screentested to play Ben-Hur.
  • # # Charlton Heston himself wrote some additional scenes between Ben-Hur and Messala. They were never used as William Wyler deemed them to be "the phoniest thing" he`d ever had to deal with from an actor.
  • William Wyler was a renowned stickler for detail. Charlton Heston recalled one particular scene where Judah Ben-Hur simply walks across a room upon his return from slavery. Such a simple scene required 8 takes before the actor finally asked Wyler what was missing. The director informed him that he liked the first take where Heston had kicked a piece of pottery to give the scene its only sound. Heston on the other hand had assumed that Wyler didn`t like the kicking and had therefore deliberately avoided doing it again.
  • In the original novel, Ben-Hur`s mother does not have a name; she is referred to as Mother of Hur. For the film, she was christened Miriam.
  • Robert Ryan was considered for the role of Messala, with Burt Lancaster as Ben-Hur.
  • Paul Newman was offered the role of Judah Ben-Hur but turned it down because he said he didn`t have the legs to wear a tunic.
  • Besides Burt Lancaster, Rock Hudson was also offered the role of Ben Hur. Hudson seriously considered accepting the part until his agent explained to him that the film`s gay subtext was too much of a risk to his career.
  • Stephen Boyd wore dark contact lenses for this film.
  • This is the only one of the three movies who have won 11 Academy Awards (the others being Titanic (1997) and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)) to have won an Oscar for acting performances.
  • # # Gore Vidal was uncredited as a screenwriter, although producer Sam Zimbalist promised he and Christopher Fry, who worked on the script independently from Vidal, a screen credit. Karl Tunberg, who wrote the original screenplay that had been very much rewritten into a shooting script by Vidal and Fry, claimed the credit. Zimbalist died before the movie ended, and thus could not testify at the guild arbitration hearing. Tunberg won the credit, but failed to win the Oscar. The film had been nominated for 12 Oscars, and won a record 11 (since tied). The movie`s sole loss was for Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium, and usually is attributed to the fallout from the credit dispute, which Vidal made widely known.
  • Upon reading Karl Tunberg`s original script, William Wyler had written in the margins "awful...horrible". Consequently, he brought in Gore Vidal - who was on contract with MGM at the time and hated being so - to rewrite the screenplay. Vidal also thought that Tunberg`s script was dreadful and initially didn`t even want to take on the project. He changed his mind when Wyler promised to get him out of the remaining two years of his contract. Christopher Fry then polished up Vidal`s work on the screenplay and wrote a new ending. Neither Fry or Vidal received screen credit for their work on the film, something which infuriated Wyler so much that he leaked the story to the press.
  • According to Gore Vidal, as recounted in The Celluloid Closet (1995) one of the script elements he was brought in to re-write was the relationship between Messalah and Ben-Hur. Director William Wyler was concerned that two men who had been close friends as youths would not simply hate one another as a result of disagreeing over politics. Thus, Vidal devised a thinly veiled subtext suggesting the Messalah and Ben-Hur had been lovers as teenagers, and their fighting was a result of Ben-Hur spurning Messalah. Wyler was initially hesitant to implement the subtext, but agreed on the conditions that no direct reference ever be made to the characters` sexuality in the script, that Vidal personally discuss the idea with Stephen Boyd, and not mention the subtext to Charlton Heston who, Wyler feared, would panic at the idea. After Vidal admitted to adding the homosexual subtext in public, Heston denied the claim, going so far as to suggest Vidal had little input into the final script, and his lack of screen credit was a result of his being fired for trying to add gay innuendo. Vidal rebutted by citing passages from Heston`s 1978 autobiography, where the actor admitted that Vidal had authored much of the final shooting script.
  • # # One of only two films shot in the MGM Camera 65 cinematographic process (the other being Raintree County (1957), which was only released in 35mm prints). The MGM Camera 65 process used 65mm negative stock, but the 70mm prints intended for projection contained additional space for a stereophonic track that was printed in magnetic stripes directly on the film in the sprocket-hole area. Magnetic stripes were superior to optical soundtracks in that they could provide four channels of sound (six in the Todd-AO process) compared to the single sound channel of optical prints. The MGM Camera 65 used an anamorphic lens akin to CinemaScope that squeezed the image by 10%. Exhibitors rejected the new system as they had already made huge capital outlays of money to equip their theaters with CinemaScope lenses, stereophonic sound systems and 70mm projectors.
  • # # During the 18-day auction of MGM props, costumes, and memorabilia that took place in May 1970 when new owner Kirk Kerkorian was liquidating the studio`s assets, a Sacramento restaurateur paid $4,000 for a chariot used in the film. Three years later, during the energy crisis, he was arrested for driving the chariot on the highway.
  • The rumor that Stephen Boyd`s double was killed during the chariot race is false. According to second-unit director Yakima Canutt, the "Messala" that was run over, a Roman soldier standing on the center island who was hit by a chariot and the driver of a spilled rig who jumped out of the way of one chariot but was immediately run over by another one were all articulated and weighted dummies (made with movable arm and leg joints), so when they were hit they "reacted" the way a normal human body would in that situation. A combination of adroit placement and expert editing made the dummies look like real people being run over.
  • For some sequences in the chariot race, some of the chariots had three horses instead of four. This enabled the camera car to move in closer.
  • One of the very few (and very expensive) 65mm cameras in the world was wrecked during the filming of the chariot race.
  • An infirmary was created especially for the filming of the dangerous chariot race scenes. However, in the end, very few injuries were actually sustained, most of them being sunburns.
  • The production cost MGM a massive $15 million and was a gamble by the studio to save itself from bankruptcy. The gamble paid off, with the film earning $75 million.
  • MGM acquired over 40 scripts for the film.
  • The film`s credits appear with the Sistine Chapel ceiling as background. Charlton Heston played Michelangelo, the painter of the Sistine Chapel ceiling, in the film The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965).
  • Leslie Nielsen made a screen test for the part of Messala, part of which can be seen in the documentary Ben-Hur: The Making of an Epic (1993) (V).
  • Audrey Hepburn visited the set during the filming of the chariot race (she was in the midst of shooting The Nun`s Story (1959)). This led to the false legend that she was an extra in the crowd scenes, as a favor to her former director, William Wyler.
  • Producer Sam Zimbalist died two months before production ended, with William Wyler handling his duties afterward.
  • The film was one of the first to involve huge marketing tie-ins, including hundreds of toys as well as `Ben-His` and `Ben-Hers` towels.
  • # # The chariot race required 15,000 extras, on a set constructed on 18 acres of backlot at Cinecitta Studios outside Rome. Tour buses visited the set every hour. Eighteen chariots were built, with half being used for practice. The race took five weeks to film.
  • Director William Wyler decided that the Romans should have British accents, and that the four Americans in the cast would play Hebrews. This was a technique later used in the TV miniseries "Masada` (1981) (mini)`.
  • # # It was the first "remake" to win the Oscar for Best Picture. The film held this title until "The Departed" (2006)" became the second "remake" to do so, 47 years later.
  • # # According to his memoirs Stewart Granger was offered the role of Messala but claimed that he turned it down on the advice of his agent who recommended Granger not to play a supporting role to Charlton Heston.
  • Producer Sam Zimbalist offered William Wyler $1,000,000 to direct this film. This was the highest director`s fee ever paid up to that time.
  • # # Director William Wyler had previous experience with Ben-Hur. He served as an assistant director under action specialist Breezy Eason (B. Reeves Eason) who was one of the directors for the chariot race in MGM`s mammoth silent version of the story, Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925).
  • [June 2008] Ranked #2 on the American Film Institute`s list of the 10 greatest films in the genre "Epic".
  • This is believed to be one of only two MGM films where the studio`s trademark Leo the Lion did not roar at the beginning of the opening credits, apparently because of the religious theme in the film. The other was "The Next Voice You Hear" (1950), another film with a religious theme. (The lion used in 1968`s "2001: A Space Odyssey" was the illustrated lion from MGM`s record label, not a real lion, and so doesn`t count.)
  • Christ was played by opera singer Claude Heater, who went uncredited for his only film role.
  • During filming, director William Wyler noticed that one of the extras was missing a hand. He had the man`s stump covered in blood with a false bone protruding from it for the scene where the galley was rammed by another ship. Wyler made similar use of an extra who was missing a foot.
  • Director William Wyler took on the project because he wanted to do a Cecil B. DeMille type picture.
  • The original opening of the film was the Three Kings following the star of Bethlehem, which was shot in the Arizona desert. This was the opening of the 1925 film.
  • Although William Wyler was Jewish, he particularly wanted to make a film that would appeal to all religious faiths.
  • The 10 square block set that represents Jerusalem is an historically accurate one.
  • Such was the expense of the film, nervous studio executives flew out to Rome on a weekly basis to check on the progress of the production.
  • The only Hollywood film to make the Vatican approved film list in the category of religion.
  • One thing William Wyler was completely unable to do was get his leading man to cry on-screen. You`ll note in Ben-Hur`s crying scenes that Charlton Heston covers his eyes.
  • This was to be the last film for Cathy O`Donnell who was then married to Robert Wyler, the director`s brother.
  • Wyler left all the details of the chariot race - every shot, crash and stunt - in the hands of his second-unit director Andrew Marton. When he saw the final version of Marton and lead stuntman Yakima Canutt`s work, Wyler remarked that it was "one of the greatest cinematic achievements" he`d ever seen.
  • # # Stephen Boyd had to wear darkened contact lens as William Wyler didn`t want his two leading men to have the same eye color. Boyd`s lenses constantly irritated and scratched his eyes, often leading to days where shooting had to be halted to allow the actor`s eyes time to recover.
  • Martha Scott was 45 at the time of filming, only 10 years older than her screen son. She also played Charlton Heston`s mother in The Ten Commandments (1956) the same year.
  • # # Originally William Wyler had planned only to film the first unit and leave the second unit duties to producer Sam Zimbalist. These plans were scuppered by Zimbalist`s premature death. MGM persuaded Wyler to see the film through to completion by offering him a sizable amount of money.
  • William Wyler missed just 2 days of the lengthy shoot due to flu.
  • Stephen Boyd wore lifts in his shoes to make his height more on a par with Charlton Heston`s.
  • When he was cast as Messala, Stephen Boyd grew a bushy beard for the role, only to be told that Romans didn`t wear beards.
  • The desert sequences were all set to be filmed in Libya until the Muslim Libyan authorities realized that the film was promoting Christianity. The unit was ordered out of the country, only to show up in Israel.
  • Producer Sam Zimbalist originally intended for the chariot race to be shot in Cinerama. This proved to be too expensive and unwieldy an idea.
  • The chariot race was shot without sound. This was added in post-production when the decision was also made to not have any music throughout the sequence.
  • Sidney Franklin had initially been courted to direct the film.
  • William Wyler was an assistant director on the original Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ (1925) and 34 years later directed its remake, Ben-Hur (1959).
  • SPOILER: Three lifelike dummies were placed at key points in the race to give the appearance of men being run over by the chariots. The best of these was the stand-in dummy for Stephen Boyd`s character that gets tangled up under the horses hooves and gets trampled to death. This resulted in a realistic death sequence that shocked audiences of the time.
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