Jocelyne LaGarde is the only performer in Academy Award history to be nominated for her only screen role. LaGarde had never acted before, and never acted again in her entire life.
The real-life sons of Max von Sydow, Henrik von Sydow and Clas S. von Sydow, both played his son, Micah, at different ages during this movie. Henrik played a seven-year-old Micah, and Clas played a twelve-year-old Micah.
This movie was responsible for launching the career of Bette Midler. She can be seen in the crowd as an extra playing a seasick passenger aboard a ship listening to Reverend Abner Hale (Max von Sydow). Midler was also hired for a small speaking role, and went to Los Angeles, California to film these scenes in a studio. Her scenes were cut from the final movie. However, Bette used the money she earned to move to New York City, where her career took off.
Fred Zinnemann was originally slated to direct and Audrey Hepburn and Sir Alec Guinness were set to star. Unfortunately, conflicts with producer Walter Mirisch and screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, as well as numerous delays caused by the weather, forced him to walk off the project shortly before filming started. George Roy Hill was brought in to direct.
When Richard Harris was first introduced to Gene Hackman on the set of Clint Eastwood's Gli spietati (1992), Harris was delighted to meet him. Hackman explained that they had met before, but Harris said no, that he would have remembered it. Hackman then had to tell him that they had met on the set of this movie twenty-six years earlier.