Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner

Movie |

Miscegenation | San Francisco, California

  • :
  • Genre(s): Comedy, Drama, Romance
  • Language(s): English
  • Director(s): Stanley Kramer, Marshall Schlom, Ray Gosnell Jr., Leonard Kunody
  • Cast(s): Spencer Tracy, Sidney Poitier, Katharine Hepburn, Katharine Houghton, Cecil Kellaway See all Cast & Crew
  • Duration: 1h 48min
  • Music: Frank De Vol,Carol Kaye,Clem Portman,Robert Martin,Charles J. Rice
  • Award(s): Oscar 1968 (Won)
    Oscar 1968 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: Eternity, People We Meet on Vacation
  • Story:
    Matt and Christina Drayton are a couple whose attitudes are challenged when their daughter brings home a fiancé who is black.
    Full Story
7.8/10
IMDb

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Videos: Trailers, Teasers, Featurettes

Guess Who's Coming To Dinner - Cast

Guess Who's Coming To Dinner - Crew

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
Matt and Christina Drayton are a couple whose attitudes are challenged when their daughter brings home a fiancé who is black.
Ratings

7.8/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Show more
Won
Oscar Award

Best Writing Story and Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen | 1968 | William

Best Actress in a Leading Role | 1968 | Katharine

BAFTA Film Award

Best Actress For | 1969 | Katharine

Best Actor | 1969 | Spencer

Best Actress | 1969 | Katharine

David Award

Best Foreign Actress Migliore Attrice Straniera | 1968 | Katharine

Best Foreign Production Migliore Produzione Straniera | 1968 | Stanley

Best Foreign Actor Migliore Attore Straniero | 1968 | Spencer

OFTA Film Hall of Fame Award

Motion Picture | 2018

UN Award

1969 | Stanley

National Film Registry Award

National Film Preservation Board | 2017

Fotogramas de Plata Award

Best Foreign Performer Mejor intrprete de cine extranjero | 1969 | Sidney

Show more
Nominations
Oscar Award

Best Picture | 1968 | Stanley

Best Director | 1968 | Stanley

Best Actor in a Supporting Role | 1968

Best Actress in a Supporting Role | 1968 | Beah

Best Actor in a Leading Role | 1968 | Spencer

Best Art DirectionSet Decoration | 1968

Best Music Scoring of Music Adaptation or Treatment | 1968 | Frank De

Best Film Editing | 1968 | Robert C.

Golden Globe Award

Best Screenplay | 1968 | William

Most Promising Newcomer Female | 1968 | Katharine

Best Supporting Actress | 1968 | Beah

Best Actor Drama | 1968 | Spencer

Best Actress Drama | 1968 | Katharine

Best Director | 1968 | Stanley

Best Motion Picture Drama | 1968

BAFTA Film Award

Best Screenplay | 1969 | William

Crystal Globe Award

Best Film | 1968 | Stanley

Golden Laurel Award

Male Dramatic Performance | 1968 | Spencer

Comedy | 1968

DGA Award

Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures | 1968 | Stanley

Eddie Award

Best Edited Feature Film | 1968 | Robert C.

WGA (Screen) Award

Best Written American Drama | 1968 | William

Best Written American Original Screenplay | 1968 | William

Gold Medal Award

Favorite Motion Picture | 1968 | Sidney

NYFCC Award

Best Actor | 1967 | Spencer

BOX OFFICE

Budget 4,000,000 USD

Box Office Collection 56,666,667 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

Katharine Hepburn never saw the completed movie. She said the memories of Tracy were too painful.

In the scene near the end where Spencer Tracy gives his memorable soliloquy, Katharine Hepburn can be seen crying in the background. This was not acting: she knew how gravely ill her longtime friend was and was moved by his remarks about how true love endures through the years.

The film's last scene was Spencer Tracy's last scene ever filmed. It took a week to shoot the scene, and at the end, he was given a standing ovation by the crew. He died seventeen days after filming was completed.

Katharine Hepburn had to use her salary as backing in order to make this movie because Spencer Tracy was so ill that the studio didn't think that he would make it to the end of the picture.

This movie was still showing in theaters at the time Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated. There is a line in the movie where Joey (Katharine Houghton) tells the maid another person is coming to dinner, to which Tillie (Isabel Sanford), the maid guesses, "The Reverend Martin Luther King?" When King was murdered, the studio immediately called the theaters showing the film and gave instructions to cut the scene.

Popular Dialogues

"[last lines] Matt Drayton: Now Mr. Prentice, clearly a most reasonable man, says he has no wish to offend me but wants to know if I'm some kind of a *nut*. And Mrs. Prentice says that like her husband I'm a burned-out old shell of a man who cannot even remember what it's like to love a woman the way her son loves my daughter. And strange as it seems, that's the first statement made to me all day with which I am prepared to take issue... cause I think you're wrong, you're as wrong as you can be. I admit that I hadn't considered it, hadn't even thought about it, but I know exactly how he feels about her and there is nothing, absolutely nothing that you son feels for my daughter that I didn't feel for Christina. Old- yes. Burned-out- certainly, but I can tell you the memories are still there- clear, intact, indestructible, and they'll be there if I live to be 110. Where John made his mistake I think was in attaching so much importance to what her mother and I might think... because in the final analysis it doesn't matter a damn what we think. The only thing that matters is what they feel, and how much they feel, for each other. And if it's half of what we felt- that's everything. As for you two and the problems you're going to have, they seem almost unimaginable, but you'll have no problem with me, and I think when Christina and I and your mother have some time to work on him you'll have no problem with your father, John. But you do know, I'm sure you know, what you're up against. There'll be 100 million people right here in this country who will be shocked and offended and appalled and the two of you will just have to ride that out, maybe every day for the rest of your lives. You could try to ignore those people, or you could feel sorry for them and for their prejudice and their bigotry and their blind hatred and stupid fears, but where necessary you'll just have to cling tight to each other and say "screw all those people"! Anybody could make a case, a hell of a good case, against your getting married. The arguments are so obvious that nobody has to make them. But you're two wonderful people who happened to fall in love and happened to have a pigmentation problem, and I think that now, no matter what kind of a case some bastard could make against your getting married, there would be only one thing worse, and that would be if - knowing what you two are and knowing what you two have and knowing what you two feel- you didn't get married. Well, Tillie, when the hell are we gonna get some dinner?"

"John: You listen to me. You say you don't want to tell me how to live my life. So what do you think you've been doing? You tell me what rights I've got or haven't got, and what I owe to you for what you've done for me. Let me tell you something. I owe you nothing! If you carried that bag a million miles, you did what you're supposed to do! Because you brought me into this world. And from that day you owed me everything you could ever do for me like I will owe my son if I ever have another. But you don't own me! You can't tell me when or where I'm out of line, or try to get me to live my life according to your rules. You don't even know what I am, Dad, you don't know who I am. You don't know how I feel, what I think. And if I tried to explain it the rest of your life you will never understand. You are 30 years older than I am. You and your whole lousy generation believes the way it was for you is the way it's got to be. And not until your whole generation has lain down and died will the dead weight of you be off our backs! You understand, you've got to get off my back! Dad... Dad, you're my father. I'm your son. I love you. I always have and I always will. But you think of yourself as a colored man. I think of myself as a man. Now, I've got a decision to make, hm? And I've got to make it alone, and I gotta make it in a hurry. So would you go out there and see after my mother?"