|
HBO Character]
|
Actor
|
Description/Diversion From History
|
|
Aunt Lou |
Cleo King |
George Hearst's cook in the series. In actual life,
Lucretia
"Aunt Lou" Marchbanks worked at the
Grand Central Hotel and other places before starting her own
boarding house. |
|
Silas Adams |
Titus Welliver |
One of
Al
Swearengen's henchmen in the series, no record of him actually
exists in
Deadwood's
history. |
|
Martha
Bullock |
Anna Gunn |
Martha
Bullock was married to
Seth Bullock.
In the series she is the mother of
William Bullock, who never actually existed, nor was she ever
married to
Seth's
brother. The couple actually had three children. |
|
Seth Bullock |
Timothy Olyphant |
Co-Owner of
Star &
Bullock
Hardware, sheriff, rancher, and owner of the
Bullock
Hotel. No affair with
Alma Garret, no step-son named
William. |
|
William Bullock |
Josh Eriksson |
On the series,
William is the deceased stepson of
Seth Bullock
and biological son of
Martha
Bullock and
Seth's
brother Robert.
William Bullock actually did not exist. |
|
Johnny Burns |
Sean Bridgers |
Gem Saloon worker/henchman. A "real life" character, history shows
him to actually have been a worse man than he appears to be on the
series. |
|
Calamity Jane |
Robin Weigert |
Frontier woman who often
followed
Wild Bill Hickok.
Calamity Jane
was, in real life, just as drunken and foul-mouthed as she is in the
series. |
|
Doc Cochran |
Brad Dourif |
The physician of the camp.
A Dr. Cochran did not exist in
Deadwood.
Perhaps patterned after Dr. Lyman F. Babcock or Dr. F.S. Howe. |
| Andy Cramed |
Zach Grenier |
Gambler who brought Small
Pox to
Deadwood,
turns minister. No history for anyone by this name in the "real"
Deadwood. |
|
Dan Dority |
W. Earl Brown |
Henchman to
Al
Swearengen at the Gem. Though his last name was spelled
differently, he did work with Al. |
|
Wyatt Earp |
Gale Harold |
The legendary lawman from
Dodge City,
Kansas
is actually noted to have been in
Deadwood
in 1876. |
|
Ellsworth |
Jim Beaver |
Prospector, manager of
Homestake Mine, marries
Alma Garret. Non existent in real life. |
|
E.B. Farnum |
William Sanderson |
Innkeeper of the
Grand Central Hotel and
Deadwood
Mayor in the series. In real life, did not own hotel, but owned a
retail business. He was elected as the major. Was married with
children. |
|
Samuel Fields |
Franklyn Ajaye |
General of African
American troop and works in the livery stable. Real life
Fields was seemingly just a flamboyant as the one of the series.
Obviously, not a "real" general in the Civil War. |
|
Alma Garret |
Molly Parker |
Widow of claim seeker, now
married to prospector
Ellsworth. Though typical of many naive people in the early camp,
Alma Garret did not exist in the "real"
Deadwood. |
|
George Hearst |
Gerald McRaney |
Successful
California
businessman and mining industrialist. Actual person who purchased
Homestake Mine. Not known to have been ruthless as in the series. |
|
Wild Bill Hickok |
Keith Carradine |
The
Old
West
gunslinger was murdered by Jack Mcall at Nutall's #10 saloon. |
| Hostetler |
Richard Gant |
Runs the camp's livery
stable in the series. No known person like this appears in
Deadwood's
history. |
| Hugo Jarry |
Stephen Tobolowsky |
Commissioner for Lawrence
County, Dakota Territory. |
| The Huckster |
Gill Gayle |
Con man, known for his
prize soap sell swindle. Based on the real life "Soapy Smith." Though Smith was a widely known conman who often worked the mining
camps of the west, there is no record that he was in
Deadwood. |
| Miss Isringhausen |
Sarah Paulson |
Tutor to Sofia Metz,
secretly a Pinkerton. Though there were probably Pinkerton Agents in
Deadwood,
no one by this name is known. |
| Jewel |
Geri Jewell |
Handicapped cleaning woman
at the Gem. No record of anyone in like this in
Deadwood's
history. |
|
Jack Langrishe |
Brian Cox |
Stage promoter and
theatrical troupe manager. Did exist in real life, but rather than
being gay, he was married. |
| Leon |
Larry Cedar |
Worker for
Cy Tolliver at The
Bella Union. No known man by this name in
Deadwood's
history. |
| Maddie |
Alice Krige |
The deceased madam of the
Chez Amis did not exist in real llife. |
|
Jack McCall |
Garrett Dillahunt |
Unemployed, classless camp
member, murdered
Wild Bill
Hickok in Nutall's #10
Saloon. |
|
A. W. Merrick |
Jeffrey Jones |
Editor of the Deadwood
Pioneer newspaper. Actual historic figure. Married with children
in real life. |
|
Sofia Metz |
Bree Seanna Wall |
Adopted daughter of
Alma Garret and sole survivor of the Metz Family Massacre. She did
not exist in real life; the only survivor of the massacre was an adult
man. |
|
Tom Nuttall |
Leon Rippy |
Owner of Nutall's #10
Saloon.
True in history. Would later run the
Bella Union. |
| Pete Richardson |
Ralph Richeson |
The cook at the
Grand Central Hotel is a fictional character. |
|
Reverend Smith |
Ray McKinnon |
Deceased minister of
Deadwood.
Actually existed but did not die in the same manner. |
|
Con
Stapleton |
Peter Jason |
Worker for
Cy Tolliver at The
Bella Union. Was actually
Deadwood's
first marshal. |
|
Soloman Star |
John Hawkes |
Co-owner of
Star &
Bullock
Hardware. Would later become
Deadwood
postmaster and mayor. Was not part of any
Deadwood
bank. |
|
Joanie Stubbs |
Kim Dickens |
Former hostess of the
Bella Union, started her own brothel called the Chez Amis until
selling it to Jack Lagerishe. Did not exist in
Deadwood's
history. May be loosely based on a madam named Mollie Johnson. |
|
Al Swearengen |
Ian McShane |
Owner of the
Gem Saloon. Was actually as bad in life as on the show. Was also
married. |
|
Cy Tolliver |
Powers Boothe |
Owner of rival
saloon,
The
Bella Union. No actual existence of anyone by the name of
Cy Tolliver in
Deadwood's
history.
Bella Union was owned by a man named Tom Miller. |
|
Trixie |
Paula Malcomson |
Former prostitute at the
Gem Saloon. |
|
Charlie Utter |
Dayton Callie |
Owner of a freight
business and sometimes travel companion of
Wild Bill
Hickok. Was married when he was in
Deadwood. |
|
Francis Wolcott |
Garrett Dillahunt |
Sociopathic geologist who
worked for
George Hearst and committed suicide by hanging. There was no
Francis Wolcott in
Deadwood's
history; however, Hearst did send investigators to
Deadwood
prior to his arrival. |
|
Mr. Wu |
Keone Young |
Though Wu is
representative of Tong leaders in the camp, there is no record for
anyone by that name in actual
Deadwood
history. In the series, he is the leader of the Chinese camp. |
| Sarah Campbell |
The first African-American
woman in the
Black
Hills. |
| Captain Jack Crawford |
The Poet-Scout |
|
Madame Dora DuFran |
A Brothel Madam and
Humanitarian who was so popular in Deadwood, that she wound up having “branch” houses in Sturgis, Rapid City, and Belle Fourche.
|
| Fred Evans |
A Real Paul Bunyan |
| Alice Goassage |
An Inspiring Lady |
| Poker Alice Ivers |
A Poker Playing "Lady" |
| Lame Johnny |
Talented Horse Thief |
| Kitty LeRoy |
A beautiful murder victim. |
|
Nat Love,
aka: "Deadwood Dick" - The Greatest Black Cowboy in the Old West |
Though there were a host of men who
called themselves "Deadwood
Dick,"
Nat Love,
who really was a great cowboy, was said to have earned the title in a
cowboy contest in
Deadwood. |
| Dr. Valentine T.
McGillycuddy |
Unsung Hero of the
Black
Hills |
| Doc Perce |
Popular Humorist |
|
John Perrett, aka: Potato Creek Johnny |
One of
Deadwood's
most colorful characters,
John Perrett, more often referred to as “Potato
Creek Johnny,” is credited with finding one of the world’s largest
gold nuggets. Though many say the nugget was actually several
nuggets melted together, the tale persists, along with stories of Perrett’s other eccentricities. |
| Jebediah Smith |
The first white man in the
Black
Hills. |
| Annie Tallent |
The first white woman in
the
Black
Hills |