Witness History

Casablanca: Making one of Hollywood’s greatest movies

7 snips
Mar 13, 2026
Leslie Epstein, writer and son/nephew of screenwriters Julius and Philip Epstein, shares first‑hand memories of their Hollywood life. He recalls the chaotic script revisions, the missing ending on the last day of shooting, casting Bogart and Bergman, and the red‑light drive that inspired the film’s famous final line. He reflects on why the movie still resonates today.
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ANECDOTE

Twins Wrote Casablanca Ending At A Red Light

  • Julius and Philip Epstein reached the final Casablanca ending mid-production when they still hadn't decided Ilsa's choice.
  • While stranded at a red light on Sunset Boulevard they simultaneously thought of the line "round up the usual suspects" and wrote the airport climax on the drive back to Burbank.
ANECDOTE

Casablanca Began As A Stage Play Bought After Pearl Harbor

  • Warner Bros bought a stage play called Everybody Comes to Rick's and assigned the Epsteins to adapt it after Pearl Harbor.
  • The studio signed the play on 8 December 1941 and assembled director Michael Curtiz, Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman for the production.
ANECDOTE

Brothers Clashed With Jack Warner Over Work Habits

  • The Epstein brothers had a famously relaxed schedule that infuriated studio boss Jack Warner.
  • Warner complained about their late arrival and they retorted by daring him to have a bank president finish the script, showing their combative confidence.
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