What happened to the cast of Jaws? See the stars of the first summer blockbuster more than 50 yea...
Celebrating more than half a century of quoting, āYouāre gonna need a bigger boat.ā
What happened to the cast of Jaws? See the stars of the first summer blockbuster more than 50 years later
Celebrating more than half a century of quoting, "You're gonna need a bigger boat."
By Randall Colburn
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Randall Colburn
Randall Colburn is a writer and editor at **. His work has previously appeared on The A.V. Club, The Guardian, The Ringer, and many other publications.
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and Ilana Gordon
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Ilana Gordon is an entertainment, culture, and comedy writer originally from Connecticut. She currently lives in Los Angeles.
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June 20, 2026 12:00 p.m. ET
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Richard Dreyfuss as Matt Hooper and Robert Shaw as Quint in 'Jaws'. Credit:
Universal Pictures/Courtesy of Getty
- *Jaws* turns 51 this year, having premiered on June 20, 1975.
- Roy Scheider, Richard Dreyfuss, and Robert Shaw led a cast rounded out by Martha's Vineyard locals.
- Director Steven Spielberg and author Peter Benchley both expressed regret over how the film contributed to the demonization of great white sharks.
*Jaws* terrified audiences when it was released during the early summer of 1975, but no one was more haunted by the film than its director, Steven Spielberg. Only 27-years-old during production, Spielberg found his movie riddled with delays and mechanical issues, earning the project the nickname āFlaws.ā In the 2025 National Geographic documentary *Jaws @ 50: The Definitive Inside Story*, Spielberg said directing the film gave him āconsistent nightmares,ā explaining, āI was still on the movie, and the film was never ending."
In the 51 years since *Jaws* premiered, the movie has topped critical lists, celebrated for its contributions to cinema and culture, while simultaneously receiving criticism ā including from Spielberg himself ā for villainizing sharks and contributing to the decline of the predator's population.
See what the cast of *Jaws* has been up to in the 51 years since the horror classic premiered.**
Roy Scheider (Chief Martin Brody)
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Roy Scheider as Chief Brody in 'Jaws'; Roy Scheider at 'The Myth of Fingerprints' premiere in 1997.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty
Roy Scheider had already appeared in some of the best movies of the '70s (1971's *Klute *and* The French Connection*) before landing the role of *Jaws*' Martin Brody, Amity Island's noble police chief and deliverer of the oft-(mis)quoted, "You're gonna need a bigger boat."
Though filmmaker William Friedkin would later lament to EW that the actor "became difficult" following the success of *Jaws*, Scheider remained a reliable player in film and on TV up until his death in 2008, balancing work with acclaimed filmmakers, including David Cronenberg (*Naked Lunch*, 1991) and Francis Ford Coppola (*The Rainmaker*, 1997), with TV gigs on *seaQuest DSV* and *Family Guy*.
Most notable, however, was Scheider's turn as Joe Gideon in the Bob Fosse-directed semi-autobiographical musical *All That Jazz *(1979), an electric and athletic turn that scored him his second Academy Award nomination, as well as nods from the Golden Globes and BAFTAs. Speaking with EW, Friedkin called it "one of the finest performances by an American actor in a movie."
Scheider maintained a fondness for *Jaws* throughout his life, reprising his role for the 1978 sequel, *Jaws 2*, and narrating a documentary, *The Shark Is Still Working* (2012).
As *The Shark Is Still Working* producer J. Michael Roddy told EW ahead of its release, Scheider remained close with the residents of Martha's Vineyard, where *Jaws* was filmed, and helped connect the documentarians with locals.
āRoy was an amazingly generous man,ā Roddy told us. āHe said, āWhat do you need?ā and that opened a lot of doors for us. Then we said, 'Letās shoot for the stars. Letās really make this as exhaustive as possible. Letās track down the stories that we havenāt heard. Weāre doing this for the fans, by the fans.' We wanted to make the documentary we always wanted to see. So no stone was left unturned.ā
All they needed was a narrator, and Roddy and his fellow producers had some great voices in mind. They checked in with Scheider, who was sick with cancer, and asked his opinion about a few names they were bouncing back and forth. āAnd he was like, āWell, what about me?ā And it clicked,ā says Roddy. āHereās the man that was our gateway. Heās our Everyman. We took his journey onĀ *Jaws*. Why not let him take us on this journey on the impact and legacy ofĀ *Jaws*?ā
Just four months after recording the narration,Ā Scheider died of complications from multiple myeloma in February 2008. He was 75.
Richard Dreyfuss (Matt Hooper)
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Richard Dreyfuss as Matt Hooper in 'Jaws'; Richard Dreyfuss at a screening of āAmerican Graffitiā during the TCM Classic Film Festival on April 14, 2023, in Los Angeles.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Presley Ann/Getty
Richard Dreyfuss was still early in his career when he played marine biologist Matt Hooper in *Jaws*, having made waves two years earlier in George Lucas' *American Graffiti* (1973).
In 1977, he turned in two of his most acclaimed performances in Spielberg's *Close Encounters of the Third Kind* and the Neil Simon-penned *The Goodbye Girl*, the latter of which won him an Oscar, a BAFTA, and a Golden Globe. He would go on to score another Academy Award nomination for his dramatic turn in *Mr. Holland's Opus* (1995).
Throughout his 50-plus-year career, Dreyfuss has pivoted between drama (*Stand By Me*, 1986), comedy (*What About Bob?*, 1991), family fare (*James and the Giant Peach*, 1996), and social commentary (*W.*, 2008). He even donned an apron for a 2020 charity edition of *The Great British Bake Off*.
In 2023, Dreyfuss made headlines for remarks he made after seeing *The Shark Is Broken*, a Broadway play about the making of *Jaws* co-written by the son of Robert Shaw, who played sea captain Quint and allegedly feuded with Dreyfuss on set.
Speaking with EW in 2011, Spielberg described the pair as having "a real mano-a-mano relationship throughout the entire production," adding, "We started *adding* scenes based on how Robert and Richard were behind the scenes! We started putting some of those anecdotes into the actual film. Matt Hooperās squeezing of the Styrofoam cup in answer to Shawās squeezing of the beer can was something that actually happened."
After seeing the play, which portrays an adversarial relationship between the actors, Dreyfuss told *Vanity Fair* in 2023* *that he was hurt by how the production made his character "a big jerk" and a "fool."
Speaking to his and Shaw's mutual ribbing, he said, "We didn't take any of that seriously... That was not a feud⦠We never had any bad feeling between us, ever... There was an ongoing kind of humor between us. If you only saw us on the set, then you might think that there was something ā a feud that was going on ā but it was never real."
Robert Shaw (Quint)
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Robert Shaw as Quint in 'Jaws'; Robert Shaw on the set of 'The Deep' in 1976.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Santi Visalli/Getty
Richard Dreyfuss was at the start of his career in *Jaws*, and Robert Shaw was near the end of his. In the 1940s, Shaw began performing Shakespeare with the famous Old Vic theater company in London. He eventually found his way to Hollywood, and in 1967 was nominated for an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for his turn as Henry VIII in *A Man for All Seasons* (1966).
Aside from *Jaws*, Shaw is likely best known for his performance as assassin Donald Grant in *From Russia With Love* (1963) and mobster Doyle Lonnegan in *The Sting* (1973), though he also leaves an impression in films including *Battle of the Bulge*Ā (1965) and *The Taking of Pelham One Two Three* (1974).
Shaw was also renowned as a writer of multiple novels, plays, and screenplays. He also had a hand in refining Quint's famous *Indianapolis* monologue. As Spielberg explained to Ain't It Cool in 2011, Shaw helped shape and trim it down after a few drafts of the speech were penned by writer Howard Sackler and filmmaker John Milius.
"Robert was great with me," Spielberg told EW in 2011. "He really was, yeah. We had a very good working relationship. Robert was aĀ *colorful*Ā character. A brilliant actor, but a very colorful personality."
When asked to elaborate on "colorful," Spielberg elaborated, "'Colorful' just means that he wasĀ *very challenging*. If you challenged him, he would challenge you."
In 1978, Shaw died of a heart attack at the age of 51.
The actor's "colorful" nature, fueled in part by his well-documented alcohol problem, is front and center in *The Shark Is Broken*, the play about the making of *Jaws* (and the *Indianapolis* monologue, in particular) co-written by and starring his son, Ian Shaw.**
The best performances in every Steven Spielberg movie
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The real-life locations where 'Jaws' was filmed
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Lorraine Gary (Ellen Brody)
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Lorraine Gary as Ellen Brody in 'Jaws'; Lorraine Gary at a 'Jaws' screening at the 2025 TCM Classic Film Festival on April 26, 2025 in Hollywood, Calif.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Jesse Grant/Getty
Lorraine Gary played Ellen Brody, wife of Roy Scheider's Chief Brody, in *Jaws, Jaws 2*, and *Jaws: The Revenge* (1987), which finds her mourning her late husband while squaring off against a great white that followed her to the Bahamas in search of revenge. (Yeah, it's weird.)
Gary worked extensively throughout the late-'60s and '70s, appearing on series such as *Ironside*,* McMillan & Wife*, and *Kojak* before making her film debut in *Jaws*. She would go on to appear in movies including *Car Wash* (1976), *Just You and Me, Kid* (1979), and Spielberg's *1941* (1979), which she declared to be her final role before retiring. (She would briefly come out of retirement for *Jaws: The Revenge*.)
When she was 19, Gary married Sidney Sheinberg, the Universal Pictures head who Spielberg credited with "[giving] birth to my career" after the mogul's 2019 death. The pair raised two sons, Bill and Jonathan.
"It was Sid that decided to spend the extra money to bet on Steven's talent," Gary told PEOPLE in June 2025. "He knew this was going to be a very big movie, and it was Sid's idea to open huge in 400 theaters, which was generally not done. And he's the man you can blame for the summer blockbusters! I blame him for that, too. I don't like most of those other movies, but I did like *Jaws*."
Murray Hamilton (Mayor Larry Vaughn)
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Murray Hamilton as Mayor Larry Vaughn in 'Jaws'; Murray Hamilton on ABC's 'Hail to the Chief' in 1985.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; American Broadcasting Companies via Getty
Sure, the shark is scary, but *Jaws*' true villain is Larry Vaughn, the Amity Island mayor who prioritizes profits over safety. Played with oily charisma by Murray Hamilton, the character is still booed to this day.
Hamilton's screen career began 30 years prior to *Jaws*' release, with the actor appearing in enduring classics like *The Spirit of St. Louis* (1957), *The Hustler* (1961), and *The Graduate* (1967), in which he played the cuckolded Mr. Robinson.
"I had been a big fan of his from *The FBI Story* with James Stewart to *The Graduate,"* Spielberg said in the 2023 book *Spielberg: The First 10 Years* (via *Vanity Fair*). "I wanted to work with him, and I saw him instantly as the mayor of Amity. I didnāt have to go through many other actors. He was the first choice for the part, and I was lucky to get him."
Hamilton would later reunite with Spielberg for *1941*, and also reprise his *Jaws* role for the sequel. In addition to a supporting role in megahit *The Amityville Horror* (1979), Hamilton's post-*Jaws* career was filled with guest appearances on popular series, including* B. J. and the Bear*; *Murder, She Wrote*; and *The Golden Girls*, the latter of which found him playing the father of Rue McClanahan's Blanche.
The actor was meant to reprise Mayor Vaughn once more for *Jaws: The Revenge*, but died of lung cancer at the age of 63 in 1986, prior to production. He left behind a wife, Terri DeMarco Hamilton of the DeMarco Sisters, and a son, David.
Lee Fierro (Mrs. Kintner)
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Lee Fierro as Mrs. Kintner in 'Jaws'; Lee Fierro in Martha's Vineyard in 2005.
Universal Pictures; Tara Bricking/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty
Lee Fierro was a mother and Martha's Vineyard local who stepped into the key role of Mrs. Kintner, the grieving mother of Alex, a boy killed by the shark.
Fierro only appeared in three films ā *Jaws, Jaws: The Revenge*, and *The Mistover Tale* (2016) ā but she served as artistic director of the Island Theatre Workshop for more than 25 years, and acted in several productions at the Martha's Vineyard Playhouse.
"The choice of Lee Fierro was one of the better ones," said *Jaws* casting director Shari Rhodes in the BBCās 1997 documentary, *In The Teeth of Jaws*. "There's something about living on that island and understanding what having a child in that water can mean. You have this absolute horror of that child not coming back."
Fierro's famous slap of Roy Scheider's Chief Brody was so intense that Scheider himself wrote about it in his autobiography. "The actress had no idea how to hit someone in the movies. Every time she slapped me, she really slapped me, and it hurt like hell. She had no control," he wrote. "A couple of times I wanted to strangle her, but it was very effective.ā The shot apparently took 17 takes.
Fierro died in 2020 at age 91 from complications related to COVID-19.
Carl Gottlieb (Meadows)
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Carl Gottlieb as Meadows in 'Jaws'; Carl Gottlieb attends the 9th annual Variety Childrenās Charity of SoCal Texas Hold āEm Poker Tournament at Paramount Studios on July 18, 2018, in Los Angeles.
Universal Pictures; Rodin Eckenroth/Getty
Carl Gottlieb played Meadows, an Amity Island reporter, in *Jaws*, but he was a bigger presence behind the scenes, working with Spielberg as a co-writer.
Speaking in the documentary *In the Teeth of Jaws*, Gottlieb describes the film's first draft, penned by Howard Sackler, as "a fairly conventional thriller... without much humor to it," adding that "the characters were kind of one-dimensional."
Spielberg said, "I asked Carl Gottlieb, who was a friend of mine, to come in to do a polish and help me... if I wanted to improvise scenes, Carl would be there to help organize the improvisation and help put it on paper."
Gottlieb would go on to contribute to the scripts for* Jaws 2* and *Jaws 3-D* (1983), and would even write a book, 1975's *The Jaws Log*, about the film's production. He also worked on scripts for films including *The Jerk* (1979) and *Doctor Detroit* (1983), and directed the Ringo Starr-starring *Caveman* (1981).
Gottlieb continued to act, appearing in films like *The Sting II* (1983), *Johnny Dangerously* (1984), and *Clueless* (1995). His most recent credit is an episode of Tim Heidecker's gonzo spy spoof *Decker*, in which he played himself.
Susan Backlinie (Chrissie Watkins)
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Susan Backlinie as Chrissie in 'Jaws'; Susan Backlinie at Chiller Theatre Expo Halloween 2023 on Oct. 27, 2023, in Parsippany, N.J.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Bobby Bank/Getty
In one of the most famous scenes ever put to film, actress-stuntwoman Susan Backlinie played Chrissie, *Jaws*' first victim.
"I didnāt want an actor to do it. I wanted a stuntperson because I needed somebody who was great in the water, who knew water ballet, and knew how to endure what I imagined was going to be a whole lot of violent shaking," Spielberg said in *Spielberg: The First 10 Years*. "So, I went to stunts to find her, and Susan was up to the challenge."
She continued to work as a stuntwoman and animal trainer on projects such as *The Return of the Incredible Hulk* (1977) and *The Villain *(1979), and also acted in Spielberg's *1941*, *The Great Muppet Caper* (1981), and *The Fall Guy* (1982).
Backlinie died in May 2024 at the age of 77 from a heart attack.
Jeffrey Kramer (Deputy Hendricks)
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Jeffrey Kramer as Deputy Hendricks in 'Jaws'; Jeffrey Kramer at Chiller Theatre Expo Spring 2023 on April 28, 2023, in Parsippany, N.J.
Universal Pictures; Bobby Bank/Getty
In his first role in a feature, Jeffrey Kramer played Deputy Hendricks, Chief Brody's right-hand man on Amity Island and the first on the scene following the death of Backlinie's Chrissie.
"Hendricks is the audienceās eyes and ears," the 79-year-old Kramer said in a 2025* *interview with *Gold Derby* for the film's 50th anniversary. "He reacts with the same revulsion viewers had in the theater. And none of us have swam in the ocean the same way since!"
Kramer went on to have a fruitful career in Hollywood, performing in beloved films and series such as *Halloween II* (1981), *Clue* (1985), and *Santa Claus: The Movie* (1985).
He found greater success, however, as an Emmy-winning producer on series such as *The Practice* and *Ally McBeal.*
Jeffrey Voorhees (Alex Kintner)
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Jeffrey Voorhees as Alex Kintner in 'Jaws'; Jeffrey Voorhees in 'The Shark Is Still Working'.
Universal Pictures (2)
For all of *Jaws*' carnage, nothing churns the gut quite like the death of local boy Alex Kintner, played by Jeffrey Voorhees.
"At one point, I remember I was standing at the door, and after the death of the Kintner boy, a man got up and started walking out ā I thought,Ā 'Oh my God. Our first walkout,*" *Spielberg said in *Spielberg: The First 10 Years.* "Then he began running and I went,Ā 'Oh, no, heās not walking out ā heās running out.'Ā I could tell he was headed for the bathrooms, but he didnāt make it and vomited all over the floor. And I just went,Ā 'Oh my God, what have I done? What kind of a movie have I made? A man has just barfed because of my film.'Ā But the great news was, about five minutes later, he went right back to his seat."
As Voorhees explained in a 2024 interview with SyFy.com, the Martha's Vineyard local "hid" from the notoriety of his *Jaws* role for years, but grew to embrace it after attending some fan conventions (and receiving residual checks). "It pays to die," he told the outlet.
These days, Voorhees continues to attend fan conventions and events, and enjoys his status as a local celebrity on Martha's Vineyard, where he's currently retired. You may even meet him during one of the island's tours of *Jaws*' shooting locations, as he occasionally pops by to chat with fans.
Peter Benchley (Interviewer)
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Peter Benchley in 'Jaws'; Peter Benchley in 2005.
Universal/Courtesy Everett; Chris Polk/FilmMagic
Peter Benchley, who penned the 1974 book on which *Jaws* is based, has a cameo in the film as a local interviewer.
It was Benchley's debut fiction novel ā he'd previously penned a few nonfiction releases ā and the author found continued success writing maritime thrillers, including *The Island* (1979) and *Beast* (1991), many of which were adapted into feature films and TV movies.
He even acted in a few more films, including a 1977 adaptation of his novel *The Deep* and Alan Rudolph's *Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle* (1994), a film in which Campbell Scott plays Benchley's grandfather, a one-time member of the famed Algonquin Round Table.
Following *Jaws*' success, Benchley expressed regret over the story's impact on the public's fear of sharks and the decimation of shark populations, committing himself to shark conservation and education efforts.
"[The] knowledge we have accumulated about great whites in the past 25 years has convinced me that I couldn't possibly write *Jaws* today... not in good conscience anyway," the author wrote in the *Independent* in 2000. "Back then, it was generally accepted that great whites were anthropophagous (i.e. they ate people) by choice. Now we know that almost every attack on a human is an accident: The shark mistakes the human for its normal prey."
In 2006, Benchley died at the age of 65 of pulmonary fibrosis. Nine years later, researchers named a new species of lanternshark after the author, calling it *Etmopterus benchleyi**, *specifically citing his shark advocacy. The author's estate carries on that advocacy with the Peter Benchley Ocean Awards, which work to recognize achievements in ocean conservation.
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