The last time
Steve
McQueen was billed as "Steven".
Steve McQueen was offered $2,500 or 10% of the
profits. He took the $2,500 because he wasn't
expecting the film to make much. It ended up
grossing over 4 million dollars.
The producers originally signed
Steve
McQueen to a three-film deal with this being the
first project. McQueen was so difficult to work with
during filming that he was released from his
contract for the other two films.
The barking for the little dog was provided by Sound Director, Gottfried Buss (information provided by Steven Buss, son of Gottfried Buss).
Pamela Bickel (now Mrs. Gottfried Buss) watched Steve McQueen's dog while he was on the set. She also turned down the opportunity to take a motorcycle ride with him (information provided by Steven Buss).
Royersford resident, Rosemary Neal, was asked to stand in for Aneta Corsaut for a scene in Steve McQueen's car. Corsaut was ill that evening, and Rosemary Neal had the same hairdo. She was paid $25.00 for her participation (information provided by her son, Richard Neal [via message board], and Barry Miller).
The old man who discovers and becomes the first victim
of the Blob was played by veteran character actor
Olin
Howland. This would be his final film in a
career than spanned almost 200 films going back to
the silent era.
When Steve and Jane go to the police station to report
the death of Dr. Hallen, the calendar on the wall
reveals that it is July 1957.
Barry Miller, a former Royersford resident, wrote
in about the Jerry's Market scene. Barry, along with some friends, were extras in the scene. The scene was shot about 7:00 p.m., shortly after his Little League baseball game ended at Lewis Road and Washington Streets. If you look closely in the Jerry's Market parking lot scene (which was supposed to take place in the early morning hours), you'll see a few kids in their Little League uniforms. Extras in the scene were "paid" a hoagie for their participation.
The newspaper being sold outside of Jerry's Market is the Inter-Borough Press (information provided by Barry Miller).
The fire stations participating in the Jerry's Market scene were the Humane Fire Company and the Friendship Fire Company in Royersford. The fire station in the Downingtown Diner scene was the Downingtown Fire Department. Yet these two scenes were supposed to take place in the same town (information provided in part by Barry Miller).
The Colonial Theatre sequence shows a poster for a
film titled "The Vampire and the Robot". Although
this was one of the proposed U.S. titles for
Mother Riley Meets the Vampire (1952), the
movie is a phoney. It is a doctored poster for
Forbidden Planet (1956)
The movie being shown at the Colonial Theatre was
Daughter of Horror, originally released as
Dementia (1955). According to Jack Harris' attorney, Jack purchased
Daughter of Horror
from the estate of the filmmaker. The movie was silent, so Jack added a narrator,
Ed McMahon. He inserted McMahon, wearing a stocking over his head and walking
through a cemetery as he spoke. Jack told Johnny Carson about it one day when
they were getting a haircut together at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Carson surprised
McMahon on The Tonight Show with the clip that Harris provided (information
provided by Michael Ravnitzky).
Although producer
Jack
H. Harris always claimed that this film cost
$240,000 to produce, years later director Irvin S.
Yeaworth Jr. said that the actual cost was only
$120,000.
In some of the promo material, the character played by
Aneta
Corsaut is referred to as "Judy". Her character
in the film is named "Jane".
Dick
Powell, who was the head of Four Star
Productions, asked to see a rough cut of this film.
This led to the casting of Steve McQueen in the
television series
Wanted: Dead or Alive (1958).