The Bachelor
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Gary Sinyor
Chris O'donnell
Renée Zellweger
Brooke Shields
Edward Asner
Mariah Carey
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Twenty-nine-year-old bachelor Jimmy has been dating Ann for three years and feels compelled to finally ask for her hand in marriage. However when he does, the proposal comes out all wrong. Instead of accepting his offer she walks out on him. When Jimmy's grandfather dies, leaving a will stipulating that his grandson must marry by age 30 or forfeit a $100 million inheritance, he tries desperately to either win her back or find a new bride -- with his next birthday only 27 hours away.
Director
Gary Sinyor
Cast
Chris O'donnell
Renée Zellweger
Brooke Shields
Edward Asner
Mariah Carey
Pat Finn
T L Brooke
Marnie Alexenburg
Ged Lynch
Michael Deeg
Timothy Paul Perez
Lea Moon Llovio
Gustavo Vargas
Natalie Bartlett
Stacy Edwards
Anastasia Horne
Rebecca Gray
Maree Cheatham
Dave Hartley
Peter Ustinov
Elizabeth Guber
Rebecca Cross
Brian Leonard
Louis Ganapoler
Jennifer Esposito
Cheri Rae Russell
Katharine Towne
Jim Jackman
Hal Holbrook
Romy Rosemont
Brantley Bush
Robert Kotecki
Christopher Carroll
Jason Ashcroft
Joe Meek
Marnie Schneider
Kiva Dawson
Ken Baldwin
Erik Kever Ryle
Jenni Pulos
Sarah Silverman
Artie Lange
Lydell M Cheshier
Nancy O'dell
James Cromwell
Niecy Nash
Michael Lee Merrins
Mary J White
Lisa Nalen
Robin Lyon
Nicholas Pryor
Kevin Jones
Jodi Taylor
Marley Shelton
Kelly Jean Peters
Jane L Powell
Mark Norby
Edith Fields
Crew
Joe Adams
Richard Adler
Tiffany Arbuckle
David Arch
Simon Archer
Joseph M Aspromonti
Gregg Barbanell
Travis Baumann
William Beatty
Bob Bowen
John C Boydston
Julius Brammer
Ronnie Bridges
Jim Brookshire
Paul Broucek
Jeanette Browning
Matt Brownleewe
Clyde Bruckman
David Byrne
Irving Caesar
Rocky Capella
Dan Caplan
Tracey Carmen
Phil Carr-forster
Leonello Casucci
Tim Chau
Rene Clark
Steve Cohen
William M Connor
Roger Cooper
Carlos Cuevas
Andy D'addario
Ayo Davis
Michael De Luca
Matt Dessero
Terry Dresbach
Leon Dudevoir
Kimberly Felix
Lorena Diane Fortier
Greg Francis
J.j. George
George Gershwin
Ira Gershwin
Emily Glatter
Richard Bryce Goodman
Roger Graham
Richard Graves
Rich Green
Albert Hammond
Jean Havez
Mike Hazlewood
Stephen Hollocker
John Houlihan
Bing Howenstein
David A Hughes
David Hyman
Daniel Indart
Doug Jackson
Gary Jackson
Nils C Jensen
David Johansen
Doc Kane
Samuel Kaplan
Buster Keaton
David P Kelsey
David Kern
Nancy Jane King
Thomas Lang
Donna Langley
Leapy Lee
Gene Levy
Gene Levy
Dennis Liddiard
Gary Liddiard
Daniel J Lombardo
Dave Lymm
Ewan Maccoll
Laura Macias
Matt Magnolia
Rusty Mahmood
Don Malouf
Richard Malzahn
Bob Marley
Bob Marley
Percy Mayfield
Valerie Mccaffrey
Roi Cooper Megrue
Barbara Mesney
Raynard Miner
Joseph Mitchell
Dick Montagne
Janet Mooney
Lynel L Moore
Randy Moore
John Murphy
Jerry Murray
David Nowell
Chris O'donnell
Mark O'kane
Carl Orff
Stephanie Lee Pleet
Cole Porter
Neal Porter
Jane L Powell
Louis Prima
Paul Prokop
Sterling P Radcliffe
Pat Reader
Bob Reitano
Rick Reynolds
Rick Riccio
Charles Rose
Jerry Ross
Mike Ross-trevor
Ged Ryan
Eric H Sandberg
Dana Sano
Barry Schulman
Richard Scott
Lloyd Segan
Tony Sepe
Ned Shapiro
Geordie Sheffer
Labi Siffre
Carl Smith
Chris Sparkes
Craig Stearns
Jonathon F Styrlund
Eric Sundahl
P R Tooke
Ellen Totleben
Nelson Tuon
Rudy Ugland
Steffany Vandeveer
Scott Weber
Barry White
Barry White
Thomas Whiting
Spencer Williams Jr.
Pete Wilmot
Jackie Wilson
Gavyn Wright
Robert Zajonc
Joy Zapata
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Sir Peter Ustinov (1921-2004)
He was born Peter Alexander Ustinov on April 16, 1921 in London, England. His father was a press attache at the German embassy until 1935 - when disgusted by the Nazi regime - he took out British nationality. He attended Westminster School, an exclusive private school in central London until he was 16. He then enrolled for acting classes at the London Theater Studio, and by 1939, he made his London stage debut.
His jovial nature and strong gift for dialects made him a natural player for films, and it wasn't long after finding theatre work that Ustinov moved into motion pictures: a Dutch priest in Michael Powell's One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1941); an elderly Czech professor in Let the People Sing (1942); and a star pupil of a Nazi spy school in The Goose Steps Out (1942).
He served in the British Army for four years (1942-46), where he found his talents well utilized by the military, allowing him to join the director Sir Carol Reed on some propaganda films. He eventually earned his first screenwriting credit for The Way Ahead (1944). One of Sir Carol Reed's best films, The Way Ahead was a thrilling drama which starred David Niven as a civilian heading up a group of locals to resist an oncoming Nazi unit. It was enough of a hit to earn Ustinov his first film directorial assignment, School for Secrets (1946), a well paced drama about the discovery of radar starring Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir Richard Attenborough.
After the war, Ustinov took on another writer-director project Vice Versa (1948), a whimsical fantasy-comedy starring Roger Livesey and Anthony Newley as a father and son who magically switch personalities. Although not a huge hit of its day, the sheer buoyancy of the surreal premise has earned the film a large cult following.
Ustinov made his Hollywood debut, and garnered his first Oscar® nomination for Best Supporting Actor, as an indolent Nero in the Roman epic, Quo Vadis? (1951). After achieving some international popularity with that role, Ustinov gave some top-notch performances in quality films: the snappish Prinny in the Stewart Granger vehicle Beau Brummel (1954); holding his own against Humphrey Bogart as an escaped convict in We're No Angels (1954); the ring master who presides over the life of the lead character in Max Ophuls's resplendent Lola Montez (1955); and a garrulous settler coping with the Australian outback in The Sundowners (1960).
The '60s would be Ustinov's most fruitful decade. He started off gabbing his first Oscar® as the cunning slave dealer in Spartacus (1960); made a smooth screen adaptation by directing his smash play, Romanoff and Juliet (1961), earned critical acclaim for his co-adaptation, direction, production and performance in Herman Melville's nautical classic Billy Budd (1962); and earned a second Oscar® as the fumbling jewel thief in the crime comedy Topkapi (1964).
He scored another Oscar® nomination in the Best Original Screenplay category for his airy, clever crime romp Hot Millions (1968), in which he played a con artist who uses a computer to bilk a company out of millions of dollars; but after that, Ustinov began taking a string of offbeat character parts: the lead in one of Disney's better kiddie flicks Blackbeard's Ghost (1968); a Mexican General who wants to reclaim Texas for Mexico in Viva Max! (1969); an old man who survives the ravaged planet of the future in Logan's Run (1976); and an unfortunate turn as a Chinese stereotype in Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen (1981). Still, he did achieve renewed popularity when he took on the role of Hercule Poirot in the star laced, Agatha Christie extravaganza Death on the Nile (1978). He was such a hit, that he would adroitly play the Belgian detective in two more theatrical movies: Evil Under the Sun (1982) and Appointment With Death (1988); as well as three television movies: Thirteen at Dinner (1985), Murder in Three Acts, Dead Man's Folly (both 1986).
Beyond his work in films, Ustinov was justifiably praised for his humanitarian work - most notably as the unpaid, goodwill ambassador for United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). Since 1968, he had traveled to all corners of the globe: China, Russia, Myanmar, Cambodia, Kenya, Egypt, Thailand and numerous other countries to promote and host many benefit concerts for the agency.
Ustinov, who in 1990 earned a knighthood for his artistic and humanitarian contributions, is survived by his wife of 32 years, Hélène du Lau d'Allemans; three daughters, Tamara, Pavla, Andrea; and a son, Igor.
by Michael T. Toole
Sir Peter Ustinov (1921-2004)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall November 5, 1999
Released in United States on Video April 18, 2000
Shown at New York Film Festival September 14, 1965.
Modernized remake of "Seven Chances" (USA/1925), directed by and starring Buster Keaton.
Steve Cohen reportedly received $850,000 against $1,000,000 for this project.
Steve Cohen reportedly received $850,000 against $1,000,000 for this project.
Began shooting November 5, 1998.
Completed shooting January 22, 1999.
George Street Pictures is Chris O'Donnell's production company.
Released in United States on Video April 18, 2000
Released in United States Fall November 5, 1999