The Nutty Professor
Der verrückte ProfessorWith
- Jerry Lewis (Prof. Julius F. Kelp/Buddy Love)
- Stella Stevens (Stella Purdy)
- Del Moore (Dr. Hamius Warfield)
- Kathleen Freeman (Millie Lemmon)
- Med Flory (Warzewski)
- Norman Alden (Football-Player)
- Howard Morris (Elmar Kelp)
- Elvia Allman (Edwina Kelp)
- Milton Frome (Dr. Leevee)
- Buddy Lester (Bartender)
- Marvin Kaplan (English Student)
- David Landfield (College-Student)
- Skip Ward (Football-Player)
- Julie Parrish (College-Student)
- Henry Gibson (College-Student)
- Les Brown and his Band of Renown
Crew
Director | Jerry Lewis |
Screenplay | Jerry Lewis, Bill Richmond |
Dialogue | Bill Davidson |
Cinematography | W. Wallace Kelley, Kyme Meade |
Camera Assistant | James Grant |
Colour Correction | Richard Mueller |
Editing | John Woodcock |
Music | Walter Scharf, Les Brown & His Band of Renown |
Sound | Hugo Grenzbach, Charles Grenzbach |
Art Director | Hal Pereira, Walter Tyler |
Costumes | Edith Head |
Make-Up | Wally Westmore |
Assistant Director | Ralph Axness |
Casting | Eddie Morse |
Production Manager | Bill Davidson |
Producer | Ernest D. Glucksman |
Associate Producer | Arthur P. Schmidt |
Produced by
Jerry Lewis Enterprises (A Jerry Lewis Production)
Jerry Lewis
Jerry Lewis was born Joseph Levitch in Newark, New Jersey in 1926 and died in Las Vegas in 2017. After performing his solo act as a teenager, he teamed up with Dean Martin in 1946 and for a decade, they were the most popular comedy duo in the US. Beginning in the early 1960s, “total filmmaker” Lewis directed, wrote, produced and acted in successful Hollywood comedies. He began a new chapter in his career in 1983 with the lead in Martin Scorsese’s The King of Comedy. His later films included Funny Bones and The Trust, and his final lead role was the title character in Max Rose.
Filmography (films as Director)
1960 The Bellboy 1961 The Ladies Man · The Errand Boy 1963 The Nutty Professor 1964 The Patsy 1965 The Family Jewels 1966 Three on a Couch 1967 The Big Mouth 1970 One More Time · Which Way to the Front? 1972 The Day the Clown Cried 1980 Hardly Working 1983 Cracking Up
Bio- & filmography as of Berlinale 2020