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  1. Jul 24, 2021 · Sellers was eventually asked to play three roles, US President Merkin Muffley, Dr. Strangelove and Captain Lionel Mandrake of the RAF. Complex and refined, Seller’s three performances showcased the full extent of his comic genius, with each character requiring a different persona and demeanour.

  2. Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (known simply and more commonly as Dr. Strangelove) is a 1964 political satire black comedy film cowritten, produced, and directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Peter Sellers in three roles, including the title character. The film, financed and released by Columbia Pictures ...

    • The movie was supposed to be a drama. The international climate of the early 1960s piqued Stanley Kubrick’s interest in writing and directing a nuclear war thriller.
    • Dr. Strangelove doesn't exist in the original book. Tone aside, the plot of Dr. Strangelove is strikingly similar to that of George’s novel. There’s one notable exception: Dr. Strangelove doesn’t appear in the novel—Kubrick and writer Terry Southern created the new character.
    • The studio demanded that Peter Sellers play multiple roles. Columbia Pictures slapped Kubrick with a few conditions at the dawn of Dr. Strangelove’s production.
    • Sellers was supposed to play Major Kong. Originally, Sellers was cast as four characters in Dr. Strangelove: Group Captain Lionel Mandrake, President Merkin Muffley, and the titular mad scientist (all of whom he played in the movie), as well as Major Kong.
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  4. Sellers takes this and turns it into something like evil glee. The world might be ending, but it seems like Strangelove is having the best day of his life. At the end of the film, billions of people are being incinerated all over the planet, but Strangelove is miraculously rejuvenated, standing up from his wheel chair, giving a Nazi salute, and ...

  5. May 9, 2024 · Peter Sellers played three roles in the film, including that of Dr. Strangelove, a weapons expert and barely reformed Nazi, and George C. Scott portrayed a hawkish general. The film was originally envisioned as a dramatic look at the Cold War (it is loosely based on the novel Red Alert by Peter George), but Kubrick felt it would be more ...

    • Lee Pfeiffer
  6. Jan 27, 2014 · Peter Sellers behind the scenes of Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964) A pensive moment with Peter Sellers out of character. Sellers plays three roles: Royal Air Force captain Lionel Mandrake, US president Merkin Muffley and the eccentric German scientist Dr Strangelove.

  7. Originally, Muffley was meant to be a wussy character, and Sellers started off playing him as a wimpy, whiny guy with a bad cold, and it was screamingly funny.