Washington Post Attorney (uncredited) Walter Cronkite ... Self (archive footage) (uncredited) Ashle Dawson ... Principal (uncredited) Sergio Delavicci ... Soldier (uncredited) Sandy Dell
Dec 26, 2017 · FRITZ BEEBE (Tracy Letts): Frederick Sessions Beebe, nicknamed Fritz, was a lawyer who rose to chairman of the board of The Washington Post Company. He was largely focused on the company’s magazine...
Who he plays in The Post: Anthony Essaye, lawyer representing the Washington Post. Why he’s ranked here: He has like three lines, which isn’t much even for a …
Jan 12, 2018 · Tracy Letts as Fritz Beebe Bradley Whitford as Arthur Parsons Bruce Greenwood as Robert McNamara Matthew Rhys as Daniel Ellsberg Alison Brie as Lally Graham Carrie Coon as Meg Greenfield Jesse Plemons as Roger Clark David Cross as Howard Simons Zach Woods as Anthony Essaye Pat Healy as Phil Geyelin John Rue as Gene Patterson Rick Holmes
The Post is a 2017 American historical political thriller film about The Washington Post and the publication of the Pentagon Papers.It was directed and produced by Steven Spielberg, and written by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer.It stars Meryl Streep as Katharine Graham, the publisher of the Washington Post, and Tom Hanks as Ben Bradlee, the longtime executive editor of The …
Jesse Plemons: Roger Clark.
Set in 1971, The Post depicts the true story of attempts by journalists at The Washington Post to publish the infamous Pentagon Papers, a set of classified documents regarding the 20-year involvement of the United States government in the Vietnam War and earlier in French Indochina back to the 1940s.
Graham was known for throwing great parties, attended by friends including high-ranking government officials like Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. (Whether she was wearing a gold caftan as fabulous as the one Streep sports in the movie is difficult to ascertain.)Dec 26, 2017
Daniel EllsbergBornApril 7, 1931 Chicago, Illinois, U.S.EducationHarvard University (AB, PhD) King's College, Cambridge Cranbrook SchoolsEmployerRAND CorporationKnown forPentagon Papers, Ellsberg paradox13 more rows
Meryl StreepMeryl Streep earned an Oscar nomination, her 21st to be exact, for her portrayal of legendary Washington Post publisher Katharine "Kay" Graham in Stephen Spielberg's The Post. The film depicts Graham's historic—and risky—legal battle to publish the Pentagon Papers.Feb 27, 2018
Tesla“Dude, I drive a Tesla!Dec 28, 2017
The film stars Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as Woodward and Bernstein, respectively; it was produced by Walter Coblenz for Redford's Wildwood Enterprises.
Bruce GreenwoodBruce Greenwood: Robert McNamara Photos (1)
ARTHUR PARSONS (Bradley Whitford): This adviser who vehemently opposes publication of the Pentagon Papers is a composite fictional character. LALLY WEYMOUTH (Alison Brie): The oldest of Katharine and Philip Graham’s four children, and now senior associate editor of The Post. Image.
WILLIAM H. REHNQUIST: He was an assistant attorney general at the time. His disembodied voice can be heard over the phone warning The Post against publishing. Later that year, Nixon nominated him to the Supreme Court, where he later became chief justice. He died in 2005.
Rosenthal died in 2006, Sulzberger in 2012. TONY BRADLEE (Sarah Paulson ): Jacqueline Kennedy was quoted as telling her husband, “Jack, you always say that Tony is your ideal woman,” and Tony (Antoinette Pinchot Bradlee, to be precise) said the president made a pass, which she rebuffed.
THE SETTING: While “The Post” is a stark reminder of what a company town Washington can be, the movie was actually made at Steiner Studios in Brooklyn. A vacant office building in White Plains, N.Y., substituted for The Post; the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of New York City on West 44th Street for The Times.
DANIEL ELLSBERG (Matthew Rhys ): A disillusioned former Marine who drafted the study, which McNamara commissioned out of “guilt rather than courage,” he says in the movie. Mr. Ellsberg turned whistle-blower while working as an analyst for the RAND Corporation, a research group under contract to the Defense Department.
THE WASHINGTON POST: “We are not a little local paper any more,” its editor, Ben Bradlee, proclaims in the movie, declaring an end to The Post’s cozy coverage of Washington. In the years before he joined as deputy managing editor in 1965, The Post lagged behind other publications in the capital, including The Evening Star ...
JUDITH MARTIN (Jessie Mueller): Later an etiquette columnist known as Miss Manners, she covered social events and made news herself in 1968 at Julie Nixon’s wedding: Ms. Martin slipped out of the press corps pen with the bridesmaids to better cover the event.
When American military analyst, Daniel Ellsberg, realizes to his disgust the depths of the US government's deceptions about the futility of the Vietnam War, he takes action by copying top-secret documents that would become the Pentagon Papers.
In all of the scenes depicting President Nixon on the phone in the Oval Office, Nixon's actual voice is heard from White House tapes.
The Georgetown alumnus’ only regret about the movie is how the primary lawyer on the case, Roger Clark, was “portrayed as a young lawyer out of his depth.” Clark was an experienced and able lawyer at that point, Essaye says.
After he got his Harvard law degree in 1961 and a brief stint with a New York law firm, Essaye began serving in the legal office of the Peace Corps, which had been recently created by President Kennedy.
In October 2016, Amy Pascal won a bid for the rights to the screenplay The Post, written by Liz Hannah. In February 2017, Steven Spielberg had halted pre-production on The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara with The Weinstein Company after a casting setback, and consequently opened his schedule to other potential films to direct. The following month, it was announced that Spielberg was in negotiations to direct and produce the film, with Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks in talks for the roles of Katharine Graham and Ben Bradlee, respectively. The Post is the first time that Spielberg, Streep, and Hanks had all worked together on a film.
It stars Meryl Streep as Katharine Graham, the publisher of the Washington Post, and Tom Hanks as Ben Bradlee, the longtime executive editor of The Washington Post, with Sarah Paulson, Bob Odenkirk, ...
Graham goes ahead and says "let's do it". The White House retaliates. The Post and Times jointly appear before the Supreme Court to plead their First Amendment constitutional rights. Meanwhile, other major newspapers start publishing about the secret war study in solidarity with the once isolated Post and Times.
The Post grossed $81.9 million in the United States and Canada, and $97.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $179.8 million, against a production budget of $50 million.
The Post (film) The Post. (film) For the 1929 Soviet animated film, see Post (film). The Post is a 2017 American historical political thriller film directed and produced by Steven Spielberg, and written by Liz Hannah and Josh Singer.
Release. The Post premiered at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. on December 14, 2017. It began a limited theatrical release in the United States on December 22, 2017, and a wide release on January 12, 2018.
Recording began on October 30, 2017 in Los Angeles. The soundtrack was released digitally by Sony Classical Records on December 22, 2017 and in physical form on January 12, 2018.