by Lynn Haney
1946
Duel in the Sun
Narrated by Orson Welles. Gregory Peck (Lewt McCanles), Joseph Cotton, Jennifer Jones, Lionel Barrymore, Lillian Gish, Walter Huston.
Vanguard/Selznick Releasing Organization
Producer: David O Selznick.
Director: King Vidor.
Screenplay: David O Selznick. Suggested by the novel by Niven Busch.
Cinematography by Lee Garmes, Hal Rosson and Ray Rennahan.
138 minutes. Color.
1947
The Macomber Affair
Gregory Peck (Robert Wilson), Robert Preston, Joan Bennett, Reginald Denny, Earl Smith, Jean Gillie.
United Artists
Producers: Benedict Bogeaus and Casey Robinson.
Director: Zoltan Korda.
Screenplay: Casey Robinson and Seymour Bennett from the story ‘The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber’ by Ernest Hemingway. Adaptation: Seymour Bennett, Frank Arnold. Cinematography by Karl Strauss.
89 minutes. Black and white.
1947
Gentleman’s Agreement
Gregory Peck (Phil Green), Dorothy McGuire, John Garfield, Celeste Holm, Anne Revere, June Havoc, Albert Dekker, Jane Wyatt, Dean Stockwell, Nicholas Joy, Sam Jaffe.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Darryl F Zanuck.
Director: Elia Kazan.
Screenplay: Moss Hart, from the novel by Laura Z Hobson.
Cinematography by Arthur Miller.
118 minutes. Black and white.
1947
The Paradine Case
Gregory Peck (Anthony Keane), Charles Laughton, Charles Coburn, Ann Todd, Ethel Barrymore, Louis Jourdan, Alida Valli, Leo G Carroll.
Vanguard/Selznick Releasing Organization
Producer: David O Selznick.
Director: Alfred Hitchcock.
Screenplay: David O Selznick, from the novel by Robert Hichens.
Cinematography by Lee Garmes.
132 minutes. Black and white.
1949
Yellow Sky
Gregory Peck (Stretch), John Russell, Richard Widmark, Charles Kemper, Henry Morgan, Robert Adler, Anne Baxter.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Lamar Trotti.
Director: William A Wellman.
Screenplay: Lamar Trotti. Based on a story by W R Burnett.
Cinematography by Joe MacDonald.
98 minutes. Black and white.
1949
The Great Sinner
Gregory Peck (Feodor ‘Fedja’ Dostoyevsky), Ava Gardner, Melvyn Douglas, Walter Huston, Ethel Barrymore, Frank Morgan.
MGM
Producer: Gottfried Reinhardt.
Director: Robert Siodmak.
Screenplay: Ladislas Fudor and Christopher Isherwood, from a story by Fodor and Rene Fulop-Miller. Cinematography by George Foley.
110 minutes. Black and white.
1950
Twelve O’Clock High
Gregory Peck (General Frank Savage), Hugh Marlowe, Gary Merrill, Dean Jagger, Millard Mitchell, Robert Arthur.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Darryl F Zanuck.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: Sy Bartlett and Beirne Lay Jr, from their novel.
Cinematography by Leon Shamroy.
132 minutes. Black and white.
1950
The Gunfighter
Gregory Peck (Jimmie Ringo), Helen Westcott, Millard Mitchell, Jean Parker, Karl Malden, Skip Homeier, Richard Jaeckel.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Nunnally Johnson.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: William Bowers and William Sellers, from a story by William Bowers and Andre de Toth. Cinematography by Arthur Miller.
84 minutes. Black and white.
1951
Only the Valiant
Gregory Peck (Captain Richard Lance), Barbara Payton, Ward Bond, Gig Young, Lon Chaney Jr, Neville Brand, Jeff Corey, Steve Brodie, Warner Anderson, Michael Ansara.
Warner Bros
Producer: William Cagney.
Director: Gordon Douglas.
Screenplay: Edmund H North and Harry Brown, from the novel by Charles Marquis Warren. Cinematography by Lionel Linden.
105 minutes. Black and white.
1951
David and Bathsheba
Gregory Peck (King David), Susan Hayward, Raymond Massey, Kieron Moore, James Robertson Justice, Jayne Meadows.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Darryl F Zanuck.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: Philip Dunne. Cinematography by Leon Shamroy.
116 minutes. Color.
1951
Captain Horatio Hornblower
Gregory Peck (Captain Horatio Hornblower), Virginia Mayo, Robert Beatty, James Robertson Justice, Moultrie Kelsall, Terrence Morgan, Richard Hearne, James Kenney, Ingeborg Wells.
Warner Bros
Producer: Gerry Mitchell.
Director: Raoul Walsh.
Screenplay: Ivan Goff, Ben Roberts and Aeneas MacKenzie from the novels Ship of the Line, Beat to Quarters, and Flying Colors by C S Forester.
Cinematography by Guy Green.
117 minutes. Color.
1952
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
Gregory Peck (Harry Street), Susan Hayward, Ava Gardner, Hildegard Knef, Leo G Carroll, Torin Thatcher, Ava Norring, Helene Stanley.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Darryl F Zanuck.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: Casey Robinson, from a story by Ernest Hemingway.
Cinematography by Leon Shamroy.
117 minutes. Color.
1952
The World in His Arms
Gregory Peck (Jonathan Clark), Ann Blyth, Anthony Quinn, John McIntire, Andrea King, Carl Esmond, Eugenie Leontovich.
Universal-International
Producer: Aaron Rosenberg.
Director: Raoul Walsh.
Screenplay: Borden Chase, from the novel by Rex Beach.
Cinematography by Russell Metty.
104 minutes. Color.
1953
Roman Holiday
Gregory Peck (Joe Bradley), Audrey Hepburn, Eddie Albert, Hartley Power, Laura Solari, Harcourt Williams.
Paramount
Producer: William Wyler.
Director: William Wyler.
Screenplay: Dalton Trumbo, Ian McLellan Hunter and John Dighton, from a story by Ian McLellan Hunter.
Cinematography by Franz F Planer and Henri Alekan.
119 minutes. Black and white.
1954
Night People
Gregory Peck (Colonel Steve Van Dyke), Broderick Crawford, Anita Bjork, Rita Gam, Walter Abel, Buddy Ebsen, Hugh McDermott.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Nunnally Johnson.
Director: Nunnally Johnson.
Screenplay: Nunnally Johnson, from a story by Jed Harris and Thomas Reed.
Cinematography by Charles G Clarke.
93 minutes. Color.
1954
Man with a Million (The Million Pound Note in the UK)
Man with a Million (The Million Pound Note in the UK)
Gregory Peck (Henry Adams), Jane Griffiths, Ronald Squire, Joyce Grenfell,
Reginald Beckwith, Hartley Power, A E Matthews, Wilfred Hyde-White.
J Arthur Rank Organization/United Artists
Producer: John Bryan.
Director: Ronald Neame.
Screenplay: Jill Craigie, from the story ‘The Million Pound Bank Note’ by Mark Twain.
Cinematography by Geoffrey Unsworth.
92 minutes. Color.
1955
The Purple Plain
Gregory Peck (Squadron Leader Bill Forrester), Win Min Than, Bernard
Lee, Maurice Denham, Ram Gopal, Brenda De Banzie, Lyndon Brook, Anthony Bushell.
J Arthur Rank Organization/United Artists<
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Producer: John Bryan.
Director: Robert Parrish.
Screenplay: Eric Ambler, from the novel by H E Bates.
Cinematography by Geoffrey Unsworth.
100 minutes. Color.
1956
The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit
Gregory Peck (Tom Rath), Jennifer Jones, Fredric March, Marisa Pavan,
Lee J Cobb, Ann Harding, Keenan Wynn, Gene Lockhart, Gigi Perreau, Arthur O’Connell.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Darryl F Zanuck.
Director: Nunnally Johnson.
Screenplay: Nunnally Johnson, from the novel by Sloan Wilson.
Cinematography by Charles G Clarke.
153 minutes. Color.
1956
Moby Dick
Gregory Peck (Captain Ahab), Richard Basehart, Leo Genn, Orson Welles, James Robertson Justice, Harry Andrews, Bernard Miles, Noel Purcell, Fredrich Ledebur.
Moulin/Warner Bros
Producer: John Huston.
Director: John Huston.
Screenplay: Ray Bradbury and John Huston, from the novel by Herman Melville.
Cinematography by Oswald Morris.
116 minutes. Color.
1957
Designing Woman
Gregory Peck (Mike Hagen), Lauren Bacall, Dolores Gray, Sam Levene, Tom Helmore, Mickey Shaughnessy, Jesse White, Chuck Connors.
MGM Producer: Dore Schary.
Director: Vincente Minnelli.
Screenplay: George Wells, from a suggestion by Helen Rose.
Cinematography by John Alton.
117 minutes. Color.
1958
The Bravados
Gregory Peck (Jim Douglas), Joan Collins, Stephen Boyd, Albert Salmi, Henry Silva, Kathleen Gallant, Barry Coe, Lee Van Cleef.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Herbert B Swope Jr.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: Screenplay by Philip Yordan, from the novel by Frank O’Rourke.
Cinematography by Leon Shamroy.
99 minutes. Color.
1958
The Big Country
Gregory Peck (James McKay), Jean Simmons, Carroll Baker, Charlton Heston, Burl Ives, Charles Bickford, Alfonso Bedoya, Chuck Connors, Chuck Hayward, Buff Brady.
United Artists
Producers: William Wyler and Gregory Peck.
Director: William Wyler.
Screenplay: James R Webb, Sy Bartlett, and Robert Wyler, from the novel by Donald Hamilton.
Cinematography by Franz Planer.
166 minutes. Color.
1959
Pork Chop Hill
Gregory Peck (Lieutenant Joe Clemons), Harry Guardino, Rip Torn, George Peppard, James Edwards, Bob Steele, George Shibata, Woody Strode, Norman Fell, Robert Blake, Biff Elliot, Barry Atwater.
Melville/United Artists
Producer: Sy Bartlett.
Director: Lewis Milestone.
Screenplay: James R Webb, from the book Pork Chop Hill: The American Fighting Man in Korea, Spring 1953 by Brigadier General S L A Marshall.
Cinematography by Sam Leavitt.
97 minutes. Black and white.
1959
Beloved Infidel
Gregory Peck (F Scott Fitzgerald), Deborah Kerr, Eddie Albert, Philip Ober, Herbert Rudley, John Sutton, Karin Booth, Ken Scott, Buck Class.
Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Jerry Wald.
Director: Henry King.
Screenplay: Sy Bartlett, from the book by Sheilah Graham and Gerald Frank.
Cinematography by Leon Shamroy.
123 minutes. Color.
1959
On the Beach
Gregory Peck (Dwight Towers), Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire, Anthony Perkins, Donna Anderson, John Tate, Lola Brooks, Guy Doleman, John Meillon, Harp McGuire, Lou Vernon.
United Artists
Producer: Stanley Kramer.
Director: Stanley Kramer.
Screenplay: John Paxton, from the novel by Nevil Shute.
Cinematography by Giuseppe Rotunno.
134 minutes. Black and white.
1961
The Guns of Navarone
Gregory Peck (Captain Keith Mallory), David Niven, Anthony Quinn, Stanley Baker, James Darren, Anthony Quayle, Irene Papas, Gia Scala.
Highroad/Columbia
Producer: Carl Foreman.
Director: J Lee Thompson.
Screenplay: Carl Foreman, from the novel by Alistair MacLean.
Cinematography by Oswald Morris.
157 minutes. Color.
1962
Cape Fear
Gregory Peck (Sam Bowden), Robert Mitchum, Polly Bergen, Lori Martin, Martin Balsam, Jack Kruschen, Telly Savalas, Barrie Chase.
Melville/Talbot/Universal-International
Producer: Sy Bartlett.
Director: J Lee Thompson.
Screenplay: James R Webb, from the novel The Executioners by John D MacDonald.
Cinematography by Sam Leavitt.
105 minutes. Black and white.
1962
To Kill a Mockingbird
Gregory Peck (Atticus Finch), Mary Badham, Philip Alford, John Megna, Frank Overton, Rosemary Murphy, Ruth White, Brock Peters, Estelle Evans, Paul Fix.
Pakula-Mulligan/Brentwood/Universal
Producer: Alan J Pakula.
Director: Robert Mulligan.
Screenplay: Horton Foote, from the novel by Harper Lee.
Cinematography by Russell Harlan.
129 minutes. Black and white.
1963
How the West Was Won
Gregory Peck (Cleve Van Valen), [same episode] Debbie Reynolds, Robert Preston, Thelma Ritter. Narrated by Spencer Tracy.
MGM/Cinerama
Producer: Bernard Smith.
Directors: Henry Hathaway (‘The River’, ‘The Plains’, ‘The Outlaws’), John Ford (‘The Civil War’), and George Marshall (‘The Railroad’).
Screenplay: James R Webb and (uncredited) John Gay. From the Life magazine series How the West Was Won.
Cinematography by William H Daniels, Milton Krasner, Charles Lang Jr, and Joseph La Shelle.
155 minutes. Color.
1963
Captain Newman, M.D.
Gregory Peck (Captain Josiah Newman), Tony Curtis, Angie Dickinson, Eddie Albert, Bobby Darin, James Gregory, Robert Duvall, Bethel Leslie, Larry Storch, Dick Sargent.
Brentwood/Reynard/Universal
Producer: Robert Arthur.
Director: David Miller.
Screenplay: Richard L Breen, Phoebe Ephron, and Henry Ephron, from the novel by Leo Rosten.
Cinematography by Russell Metty.
126 minutes. Color.
1964
Behold a Pale Horse
Gregory Peck (Manuel Artiguez), Anthony Quinn, Omar Sharif, Mildred Dunnock, Raymond Pellegrin, Paolo Stoppa.
Brentwood/Highland/Columbia
Producer: Fred Zinnemann.
Director: Fred Zinnemann.
Screenplay: J P Miller, from the novel Killing a Mouse on Sunday by Emeric Pressburger.
Cinematography by Jean Badal.
112 minutes. Black and white.
1965
Mirage
Gregory Peck (David Stillwell), Diane Baker, Walter Matthau, Leif Erikson, Kevin McCarthy, Jack Weston, George Kennedy, Walter Abel.
Universal
Producer: Harry Keller.
Director: Edward Dmytryk.
Screenplay: Peter Stone, from the novel Fallen Angel by Walter Ericson.
Cinematography by Joseph MacDonald.
108 minutes. Black and white.
1966
Arabesque
Gregory Peck (David Pollock), Sophia Loren, Alan Badel, Kieron Moore, John Merivale, Carl Duering.
Universal
Producer: Stanley Donen.
Director: Stanley Donen.
Screenplay: Julian Mitchell, Stanley Price
, and Pierre Marton, from the novel The Cipher by Gordon Colter.
Cinematography by Christopher Challis.
105 minutes. Black and white.
1969
The Stalking Moon
Gregory Peck (Sam Varner), Eva Marie Saint, Robert Forster, Noland Clay, Russell Thorson, Frank Silvera, Lonny Chapman.
Pakula-Mulligan/National General
Producer: Alan J Pakula.
Director: Robert Mulligan.
Screenplay: Alvin Sargent, from the novel by Theodore V Olsen.
Cinematography by Charles Lang.
111 minutes. Color.
1969
MacKenna’s Gold
Gregory Peck (MacKenna), Omar Sharif, Camilla Sparv, Telly Savalas, Keenan Wynn, Julie Newmar, Ted Cassidy, Lee J Cobb, Raymond Massey, Burgess Meredith, Anthony Quayle, Edward G Robinson, Eli Wallach.
Highroad/Columbia
Producers: Carl Foreman and Dimitri Tiomkin.
Director: J Lee Thompson.
Screenplay: Carl Foreman, from the novel by Will Henry.
Cinematography by Joseph MacDonald.
128 minutes. Color.
1969
The Chairman
(The Most Dangerous Man in the World in the UK) Gregory Peck (John Hathaway), Anne Heywood, Arthur Hill, Alan Dobie, Conrad Yama, Zienia Merton.
Apjac/Twentieth Century Fox
Producer: Mort Abrahams.
Director: J Lee Thompson.
Screenplay: Ben Maddow, from the novel by Jay Richard Kennedy.
Cinematography by John Wilcox.
104 minutes. Color.
1969
Marooned
Gregory Peck (Charles Keith), Richard Crenna, David Janssen, James Franciscus, Gene Hackman, Lee Grant, Nancy Pruett, Mariette Hartley, Scott Brady.
Columbia
Producer: M J Frankovich.
Director: John Sturges.
Screenplay: Mayo Simon, from the novel by Martin Caidin. Cinematography by Daniel Fapp.
133 minutes. Color.
1970
I Walk the Line
Gregory Peck (Sheriff Henry Tawes), Tuesday Weld, Estelle Parsons, Ralph Meeker, Lonny Chapman, Charles Durning.
John Frankenheimer Productions/Edward Lewis Productions/ Halcyon Productions/Columbia
Producers: Edward Lewis and Harold D Cohen.
Director: John Frankenheimer.
Screenplay: Alvin Sargent, from the novel The Exile by Madison Jones.