Mister 880 74 years old

It's the picture everybody is cheering !

Mister 880

The Skipper is a charming old man loved by all his neighbors. What they don't know is that he is also Mr. 880, an amateurish counterfeiter who has amazingly managed to elude the Secret Service for 20 years.

Credits

Mister 880 Cast

Name Character
Millard Mitchell He was 47, 50 years old when he died as 'Mac' McIntire
Howard St. John He was 44, 68 years old when he died as Chief
Burt Lancaster He was 36, 80 years old when he died as Steve Buchanan
Dorothy McGuire She was 34, 85 years old when she died as Ann Winslow
James Millican He was 39, 44 years old when he died as Olie Johnson
Rico Alaniz He was 30, 95 years old when he died as Carlos - Spanish Interpreter (uncredited)
Frank O'Connor He was 69, 84 years old when he died as Cigar Store Counterman
Hugh Sanders He was 39, 54 years old when he died as Thad Mitchell
Frank Wilcox He was 43, 66 years old when he died as Mr. Beddington
Edmund Gwenn He was 73, 81 years old when he died as 'Skipper' Miller
Kathleen Hughes She was 21, now 96 years old as Secretary (uncredited)
Larry Keating He was 51, 64 years old when he died as James F. Lee - Skipper's Attorney (uncredited)
George Adrian as Carlos (uncredited)
Minor Watson He was 60, 75 years old when he died as Judge O'Neil

Mister 880 Crew

Name Department
Joseph LaShelle as Director of Photography. He was 50 (89) years old when He died Camera
Julian Blaustein as Producer. He was 37 (82) years old when He died Production
Robert Riskin as Screenplay. He was 53 (58) years old when He died Writing
Ben Nye as Makeup Artist. He was 43 (79) years old when He died Costume & Make-Up
Sol Kaplan as Original Music Composer. He was 31 (71) years old when He died Sound
Travilla as Costume Design. He was 30 (70) years old when He died Costume & Make-Up
Edmund Goulding as Director. He was 59 (68) years old when He died Directing
Robert Fritch as Editor. Editing
Mister 880 poster
Mister 880 (74 years)

It's the picture everybody is cheering !

  • Release day: Friday, September 29, 1950
  • Runtime: 90 minutes