Are Daniel and Ephraim twins ?


Are Daniel and Ephraim nonidentical twins because most of time they are shown together.

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If they'd been twins (whether identical or fraternal), their mother would have noted their "twin" status by giving both of them Biblical names beginning with the letter "D" - Daniel and David, for example.

I don't see any real evidence that they're twins.

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Not necessarilly - Even with twins, one is older than the other - You get the impression they are twins, because they are almost always together, do the same things at the same time and speak for each other, as twins often do. When Milly asks: Who is Daniel and who is Ephraim, they both at the same time say "Me". So I think they are twins, Daniel the older twin and Ephraim the younger.

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That makes sense. It never even occurred to me that they were, but now watching it with that in mind it totally makes sense!

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Not necessarilly - Even with twins, one is older than the other.



I never said twins had to be born at the same second - where did you get that? Read my post again - all I said was that if they were any kind of twins, their mother would have noted this by giving both of them names beginning with the letter "D" (and certainly a director as smart as Stanley Donen would have made sure there was crystal clear evidence they were twins). So, where in the script does it specifically state that Daniel and Ephraim are twins? There are many brothers who are always together & finish each other's sentences, but that doesn't mean they're twins - often it's simply a case of being close & on the same wavelength. As far as the film in concerned, sometimes we see them paired off with each other, but they're not always together - they're not Tweedledum and Tweedledee. Just as often we see one or the other paired off with another brother, or with Millie, or with (respectively) Martha or Liza.

And we should also consider the fact that Marc Platt (Daniel) and Jacques d'Amboise (Ephraim), besides the studio-approved red hair, don't look anything like fraternal or identical twins.


Daniel -

http://www.classicmoviemusicals.com/actorsd.htm#doggett

Ephraim -

http://www.classicmoviemusicals.com/actorsd.htm#damboise


If you think they look like twins, fine. But I'm sure if the filmmakers wanted to indicate they were twins, they would have alluded to it in the script - not to mention hiring two actor-dancers who actually resembled each other.

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"if they were any kind of twins, their mother would have noted this by giving both of them names beginning with the letter "D"
Where did you get that gem? Were you friends with his mom? That doesn't make sense, if I was his mom I would name the older one with the letter D and the younger with the letter E. If she had any hope of making it all the way to Z I think that would have been the thing to do.

"besides the studio-approved red hair, don't look anything like fraternal or identical twins."
And how exactly do "fraternal twins" look? If they were believable as brothers who were fairly close in age, then they're believable as fraternal twins. That's what fraternal twins are. They have no more similar genetic make-up than any two brothers, so the fact that they "dont' look anything like fraternal twins" is the same as saying they "don't look anything like brothers". This may be true, but your point is moot as if they're supposed to be brothers in the movie they very well could be twins.
I don't necessarily think they're twins, but your insistence that they aren't just because their names and lack of physical similarities doesn't hold any water whatsoever.




"Weirdness was all he cared about. Weirdness and sex and plenty to drink."

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Where did you get that gem? Were you friends with his mom?


I'm talking about storytelling devices that were used in films and television programs during the 50s and 60s. Twins were often given names that either began with the same letter (like Sharon and Susan in The Parent Trap), or "sound alike" names (like Teensy and Weensy in I Love Lucy).


If they were believable as brothers who were fairly close in age, then they're believable as fraternal twins.


But that's my point - they're not believable as brothers, which means they're not believable as twins of either type. If they were fraternal twins, they'd at least look like brothers. But as I pointed out before, Marc Platt and Jacques d'Amboise look nothing alike (apart from the studio-approved red hair).

In Seven Brides For Seven Brothers, we're talking about two brothers who don't have a name similarity, don't look like twins, and aren't identified as twins. And that's why I can't understand this assumtion that they are twins.

This isn't anything to get excited about. I'm simply saying (as I said before) that if the filmmakers wanted to indicate Daniel and Ephraim were twins, they would have alluded to it in the script - not to mention hiring two actor-dancers who actually resembled each other.

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To your "sound alike" names point, it makes sense, but you seem to be ignoring the rules (explicitly established in the movie) about alphabetically arranged names from the Bible. I don't think it's a stretch to assume that these completely non-binding storytelling devices would be ignored for the much more important naming rules set up specifically in Seven Brides.


And all I was saying about them being "believeable" as brothers was that if they're supposed to be brothers in the movie, they could just as easily be fraternal twins. Fraternal twins have no better chance of looking alike than any two brothers, so since they're "believable as brothers" from the standard of casting, they're de facto just as believable as fraternal twins.

I agree that it would make more sense if the filmmakers called out that they were twins. But I don't think it's appropriate to have a hardline stance against the suggestion. They very well could be. You don't know anymore than I do whether the actors/writer/director/etc thought personally that they might be twins.
So, while your theory is that there's no definitive evidence in the movie, as mentioned before there are a few facts that imply it may have been true When there's 14 relatively major character it's unlikely they'd get into all the details (whether they are twins or not has virtually no bearing on the movie). Maybe the filmmakers way of "showing" that they are twins was having them speak at the same time and being together often.



"Weirdness was all he cared about. Weirdness and sex and plenty to drink."

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To your "sound alike" names point, it makes sense, but you seem to be ignoring the rules (explicitly established in the movie) about alphabetically arranged names from the Bible.


But that's a point I made in my first post. For twins, filmmakers in the 50s and 60s either used names that began with the same letter, or "sound-alike" names. In the specific case of Seven Brides For Seven Brothers, "sound-alike" names wouldn't have worked - which is why, if the filmmakers wanted to get across that two of the brothers were twins, they'd have used a pair of names that began with the same letter (i.e., Daniel and David).

Of course, there have been films about twins in which the names are neither "sound-alikes" nor do they begin with the same letter, but these are films that have clearly identified the siblings as twins - which isn't the case in Seven Brides For Seven Brothers.


Maybe the filmmakers way of "showing" that they are twins was having them speak at the same time and being together often.


This is something else I've already addressed - if you watch the film closely, you'll notice they're not always together; they're not Tweedledum and Tweedledee. And they only speak at the same time once, which could just as easily indicate (in view of Milly's question) they're both "me-centric" guys who don't know how to express themselves effectively.

Stanley Donen was a smart filmmaker who always made things clear. And Albert Hackett, Frances Goodrich and Dorothy Kingsley were all experienced screenwriters who knew their way around a script. If Daniel and Ephraim had been twins, the filmmakers would have presented conclusive evidence of this (not to mention hiring two actors who actually resembled each other).

Once again, it's perfectly all right to speculate endlessly about the characters presented in this film - one could make guesses about which of the brothers is a wife beater, an alcoholic or a possible bisexual. But without conclusive evidence from the film itself, claims like these are never going to be anything more than idle speculation.

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Reading all post , I understand that it is not necessary that they are twin but I would love to see if they make a remake of this lovely movie and in the remake they should show Daniel and Ephraim as twin.

does any other agree with me ?

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Sorry, but I do not agree. They were not twins in the original; they both replied "me," because they were asked at the same time and Daniel said "me," to the who is Daniel part while Ephraim said, "me," to the who is Ephraim part.

Mostly I don't agree because this movie should never be remade at all. That ensemble dance could never be done better or even as well; it and the ballet from "An American in Paris" are the two best ensemble dances ever done in movies. Two of the brothers were ballet stars, (Marc Platt and and Jacques D'Amboise, one was a jazz dancer Matt Maddox), and two were musical theater dancers (Tommy Rall and Russ Tamblyn). No one had a voice like Howard Keel. Only Jeff Richards was neither a singer nor a dancer.

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Actually, I find that Calebe and Daniel always looked alike. When I was little I use to get them confused.

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My brother is in the play right now, and the script states that Daniel and Ephraim are twins.

~Micahel Vartan kicks SD-6 Butt~

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My brother is in the play right now, and the script states that Daniel and Ephraim are twins.


Well, the play isn't the movie.

And where, exactly, does the play state that Daniel and Ephraim are twins? Is it in the dialogue, or in the character and/or stage descriptions? I live in NYC and can easily get a copy of the play; I'd like to know where I can find the relevant information.

I'm asking because the character breakdown I've attached below (for the stage production) doesn't indicate they're twins. It doesn't even indicate they're in the same age range. What it does indicate is that Daniel should be older than Ephrain by about two years -

http://www.stageagent.com/Shows/View/842

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That two year difference clearly isn't binding. Every single brother has a "2 year older" age range just by alphabetical order.

Either way, you're wrong. If just simply the point that some people are trying to make is that they COULD be twins... meanwhile you're saying they're definitely NOT.
Since you have no evidence to the contrary, I have to assume that they're not NOT twins.




"Weirdness was all he cared about. Weirdness and sex and plenty to drink."

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That two year difference clearly isn't binding. Every single brother has a "2 year older" age range just by alphabetical order.


Huh? Have you never seen a breakdown for stage casting before? It's pretty straightforward - it means the production should cast actors in the age ranges described, and the age difference between each brother (from oldest to second oldest, from second oldest to third oldest, from third oldest to fourth oldest, and so on) should be about two years.


Either way, you're wrong. If just simply the point that some people are trying to make is that they COULD be twins... meanwhile you're saying they're definitely NOT.


Actually, the title of this thread is "Are Daniel and Ephraim twins?" and that's the question I've been addressing - not "Could Daniel and Ephraim be twins?"

And how am I wrong? Wrong about what?

What I've said (and I've said it repeatedly) is there's no conclusive evidence in the script that Daniel and Ephraim are twins. This is what I've said right from the start, and I've said it again and again. I've also linked the (already mentioned) casting breakdown for the stage version, which makes it clear Daniel and Ephraim aren't twins.

And based on what you've written, that's what you also believe.

So why the argument? What is your point, exactly?

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And 2 years age difference isn't something readily visible on stage. As your own words stated, the stage production is NOT the movie.

You're wrong because you are definitively stating they are NOT twins. There is absolutely NO conclusive evidence that they're not twins. You are correct that there's no evidence that they ARE twins... but that doesn't prove the "maybe they are twins" statement wrong. It seems we're just arguing semantics, but "maybe" can only be proven wrong with evidence to the contrary. All you've provided is a vague statement about how movies back then were apparently upfront about everything and would never have let anything go unsaid/be cut out. Also, you provided the casting suggestions for the story as provided in a completely different formant.



"Weirdness was all he cared about. Weirdness and sex and plenty to drink."

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You're wrong because you are definitively stating they are NOT twins.

No, I'm saying there's no conclusive evidence in the script they're twins. It's all I've ever said. I said it back in January -

If you think they look like twins, fine. But I'm sure if the filmmakers wanted to indicate they were twins, they would have alluded to it in the script - not to mention hiring two actor-dancers who actually resembled each other.

A few months ago, erin_m_ross80 posted that she felt Caleb and Daniel were the ones who looked alike, and I can fully understand that observation. Matt Mattox and Marc Platt both have the same type of wiry dancer's build, and they both have facial hair. I could even understand someone feeling that Ephraim and Frank looked alike - Jacques d'Amboise and Tommy Rall are both clean-shaven, and they both have a more muscular build. But Daniel and Ephraim? Twins? That's a stretch. It isn't just that there's no indication in the script that they're twins, or that they're so physically dissimilar, but there's nothing in the two documentaries about this film that even hints that they're twins. If they were twins, don't you think it would have been mentioned somewhere? Don't you think a quality MGM film about seven brothers would have made it crystal clear that two of those brothers were twins? But then, you've already stated you don't believe they're twins yourself, which makes this one of the most bizarre exchanges I've ever experienced on IMDb.




There is absolutely NO conclusive evidence that they're not twins.

Well, there's absolutely NO conclusive evidence that some of the abducted "brides" aren't having sex with each other, but is this reason enough to assume they are?

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Are Daniel and Ephraim twins ?
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Possibly


Wow i may have just summed up 17 posts. I can't even begin to imagine how or why you'd take it so seriously but it's the internet i suppose ^^

I intend to live forever...so far so good

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Possibly.


There's nothing in the script to suggest she does, but who cares? This is the internet - why concern ourselves with facts?

Oh, and by the way - there's talk that Gideon is "possibly" a transvestite.

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Ahhh Hyperbole

The point of this thread was Are Daniel and Ephraim twins? and the answer is Possibly. You've made good points with a level of passion and dedication that I'm not sure the subject warrants, however you don't know for sure any more than anyone else does.

You can go back and forth about this for as long as you want ... indefinitely in fact but it can't be proved either way because the truth and the facts are we don't know. Like PSVillas states it may have been a plot point that got dropped a long the way leading to confusion and much internet debate.

P.S. I know this is the internet but rough sex .. really? 6_6

I intend to live forever...so far so good

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Thank you.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjDYROYuB7w

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Oookay? O_o

I think you've won this one by default, you clearly care a whole lot more about it than I do.

Peace out xxx

I intend to live forever...so far so good

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Here's a possible explanation of why some people think that Daniel and Ephraim may be twins. Perhaps at some point during the production that was the intent and the idea was dropped along the way. As we all know, changes were made to scripts all the time in the production of a film. That would explain why there may be some overtones to the idea in the completed film, not that I saying there is but just an idea. I know I've read about examples of this in other films. The only one coming to me now is from the Wizard of Oz where the wicked witch refers to a "little bug" that will tire out Dorothy and Friends. This refers to the cut Jitterbug number in the movie.

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Just to muddy the waters a little, clearly the casters of the film were not overly concerned about the ages of those cast as the brothers matching the ages of the characters. It's pretty obvious that Jacques D'Amboise (who played Ephraim) was younger than Tommy Rall (who played Frank). This prompted me to do a little research about the age of the actors when the film was in production in 1953.

Howards Keel (Adam) was 34.
Jeff Richards (Benjamin) was 29.
Matt Mattox (Caleb) was 32.
Marc Platt (Daniel) was 39.
Jacques D'Amboise (Ephraim) was 19.
Tommy Rall (Frank) was 23.
Russ Tamblyn (Gideon) was 18.

IMO the fact that those in production did not care to match the actual actors' ages with the ages of the brothers, indicates that they probably didn't really care whether or not Daniel and Ephraim, or any other pairings of brothers were perceived as twins or not. In other words, the question doesn't really matter, and the appropriate answer is "If you want to speculate that they might be twins, that's fine, but there's nothing to support a definitive answer one way or the other."

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the appropriate answer is "If you want to speculate that they might be twins, that's fine, but there's nothing to support a definitive answer one way or the other."

Which, given the overall percentages in the general population, translates to "probably not".

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Are Daniel and Ephraim nonidentical twins because most of time they are shown together.

If there were twins among the brothers it would have been Benjamin & Ephraim who looked identical until they shaved. I saw only one scene where Daniel and Ephraim were together and all or some of the other brothers weren't there.


"Where were you born? At home. I wanted to be near my mother."

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If there were twins among the brothers it would have been Benjamin & Ephraim

Given that it is stated explicitly that the parents were working their way through the alphabet in order as their sons were being born .......

No pair of brothers whose names are not adjacent in alphabetical order can possibly be twins.

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I am not talking about looks. may be if they remake of this classic, they can show Daniel and Ephraim as twin . Actually since the actors who played these characters have very different look and difference in ages that is why but If some one read a script without seen a movie or make a remake . he can easily identify their on screen pair.

They are few significant scenes where you can find that They could be twins.

1- Introdcution : When Milly asks to them Who is Daniel and who is Ephraim, they both at the same time say "Me".

2- Barn Dance : When they first met with their brides they jumped together and took the dessert from Milli.

3- Lonesome Polecat : When they were cutting the wood and singing.

4- Kidnapping : When they were trying to kidnap their girls.

5- Girls throw cold water : When each bride of the six brothers pour water or throw snow ball on them, Daniel and Eprhaim ' brides pour water on them same time.

5- When Milly gave birth of baby girl : All other brothers gave individual gifts to Milli except them, both of them gave a baby craddle.


May be there are more.

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As you have noted, which I was going to do, Daniel and Ephraim were constantly paired together, from "Me" to kidnapping the girls, to the board being dropped and both of them being taken out during the barn raising, to carrying in the baby present together.

With Howard Keel as eldest brother, Jeff Richards unable to dance but towering over the others, Russ Tamblyn standing out as the smallest Gideon, Tommy Rall getting all the dance moves and flips (as well as being darker haired than the others), this leaves Caleb, Daniel and Ephraim.

Caleb had his bits (mainly being the only one to keep the beard made him stand out, as well as his yellow shirt was slightly designed differently from the others), so that leaves Daniel and Ephraim.

Tho Ephraim sang to his bride at the end without Daniel in sight, I've always concluded all the bits with them together was simply to give them something to do in the movie and be recognized for it.

Bits with Marc Platt (Daniel) clearly show he wasn't that good a performer (he spoke too loud at the breakfast table after their clothes were washed, he extends his hand to the other fellow at the barn dance in a rather frightening manner, he walks out of the cabin after Milly inspects their fingernails in a truly Gomer Pylish manner).
Jacques, by comparison, was pretty clumsy as well, so they were just the two left over, pair them up to give them something to do, is how I always took it.

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They are few significant scenes where you can find that They could be twins.

1- Introdcution : When Milly asks to them Who is Daniel and who is Ephraim, they both at the same time say "Me".

2- Barn Dance : When they first met with their brides they jumped together and took the dessert from Milli.

3- Lonesome Polecat : When they were cutting the wood and singing.

4- Kidnapping : When they were trying to kidnap their girls.

5- Girls throw cold water : When each bride of the six brothers pour water or throw snow ball on them, Daniel and Eprhaim ' brides pour water on them same time.

5- When Milly gave birth of baby girl : All other brothers gave individual gifts to Milli except them, both of them gave a baby craddle.


May be there are more.

I agree with the above. When Milly was first introduced to them and they replied in unison, "Me!" I surmised they must be twins, and every one of the above scenes reinforced that idea.

Might I be wrong? of course. But that's a whole-lotta wasted clues if not.

- -
XenaGuy

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Ephraim is played by Jacques d'Amboise who at the time was a dancer for the New York City Ballet. He didn't have a speaking part nor is he a twin. I work for him so I know this for a fact.

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