
LOS ANGELES, CA (May 5, 2011) – Tommy Lee Jones, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Hal Holbrook, James Spader, John Hawkes, Tim Blake Nelson, Bruce McGill and Joseph Cross are in negotiations to join the cast of DreamWorks Studios’ “Lincoln,” it was announced today by DreamWorks partners Steven Spielberg and Stacey Snider. Also in negotiations to join the film are David Costabile, Byron Jennings, Dakin Matthews, Boris McGiver, Gloria Reuben, Jeremy Strong, and David Warshofsky. This group joins the previously announced casting of Daniel Day-Lewis and Sally Field in the Spielberg directed film about the 16th President of the United States.
Based on the best-selling book, Team of Rivals, by Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, the screenplay has been written by the Pulitzer Prize winner, Tony Award winner, and Academy Award nominated writer Tony Kushner. It will be produced by Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg.
The film will focus on the political collision of Lincoln and the powerful men of his cabinet on the road to abolition and the end of the Civil War.
Oscar winner Tommy Lee Jones will play Thaddeus Stevens, a Republican leader and powerful congressman from Pennsylvania in the U.S. House of Representatives. Stevens was a staunch supporter of abolishing slavery and was critical to writing the legislation that funded the American Civil War.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt, known for his roles in “Inception,” “(500) Days of Summer,” and next year’s “The Dark Knight Rises,” will take on the role of Robert Todd Lincoln, eldest son of President Lincoln and the only one to live past his teenage years.
Other announced cast will take on various supporting roles in the film.
Doris Kearns Goodwin won her Pulitzer Prize for “No Ordinary Time,” the story of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt and the home front in World War II. Kushner’s prize was for his play “Angels in America,” which later became an Emmy Award-winning television special. He had previously worked with Spielberg on “Munich” for which he was nominated for an Oscar in the Adapted Screenplay category.
Filming is expected to begin in the fall of 2011 in Virginia for release in the fourth quarter of 2012 through Disney’s Touchstone distribution label.


Glad to see that David Warshofsky keeps getting great work–he’s an excellent actor and person.
Wow! Excellent cast.
God this is going to be an instant classic. All in the casting.
I Loved the Book and I hope that we get to see Lincoln’s Private Emotions that we have read about but not seen on the big screen.!
All it’s missing is “The Situation.”
Great cast! But what about the Frederick Douglass role? Will Gloria Reuben be the only person of color playing a major role in a film about the American Civil War…? Hm…
Someones gotta say it: the oscar race for 2012 has begun
Actually, if this film plays up to its potential the race may already be over.
I believe that should be “Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and PLAGARIST Doris Kearns Goodwin.”
Good thing she’s not a “plagiarist” cuz that would be bad.
Jesus. Passive aggressive, much?
Is this the Lincoln film that is going to portray him gay?
What do you mean by playgorist? Tell more A’s I wasn’t aware of her doing so. Thanks!
Now, if they could only do something about Sally Field being about 20 years too old for her role…great acting only gets you so far. I hope they aren’t going to Tron: Legacy her, because the technology just isn’t convincing enough yet.
I know, right??? Douglas was to run for vice president with a female running mate… Guess there is too much history to squeeze into 90 minutes!!!!
Random Batman connection – Old Two Face and John Blake together on screen.
Hope that Steven and Tony have found the classic movie hiding in the source material (and that they give more consideration to the rivalry with Mc Clellan than Goodwin did). Important subjects do not make important films. Guild and craft skills do.
Nope. In the book, Doris describes how various Repiblican candidates for President selflessly put aside their political aspirations fir the betterment of our nation. And, it’s unlikely that Lincoln was gay. Yes, he sometimes slept in bed with a man when traveling, but that was fairly customary in America during the 1800s.
Dakin Matthews needs to be in every 19th century movei from now on.
A liberal Democrat producing/directing, a liberal Democrat writing book & a liberal Democrat writing the screenplay… liberal Democrats acting… about Republicans… yah I can see a fair & balanced story… sure… sure…
Are you nervous that they are going to serve up a hatchet job on Lincoln, and turn the movie into a pro-Conferderacy propaganda piece?
If you know a coservative Republican director who would do a better job on this movie, don’t keep it a secret. Tell us his/her name.
Clint Eastwood.
May I suggest you re-examine a history book. The Republican and Democratic parties in the 1860′s have zero relationship to the parties of today, just the same names. Clearly you’re having a knee-jerk reaction.
With Kushner writing can “the gay Lincoln be far behind”(get this straight the man shared his bed in those delux 1 room frontier Inns with ANOTHER MAN) lucky it wasn’t 10 Europeans and an Indian tribe.
Never could stomach Spielberg’s childish sentimental trash.
They better have Fredrick Douglass in this movie,and he better have a large role instead of just some kind of “supporting role”, because if they don’t I’m not spending a cent on this movie and it will be the biggest shaft ever. And to the idiot who commented on the whole democrats republican thing, research your history, the republicans in those days weren’t the same type of republicans of today. It’s not the same party, but thanks for showing your ignorance, I’m sure all of the educated republicans enjoy it.
1-if todays teabaggers had a single thing in common, politically, with the newly formed Republican party of 1860 our current affairs would be much improved, in fact, the liberals of the Civil War and Reconstruction WERE the Republicans. I am certain that if Lincoln were alive today, he would be a Democrat.
2-Lincoln was not gay. In the 19th century, men shared beds as a matter of economy and custom.
3-i agree that Douglas should have a prominent role in this film.
4-the Oscar race for 2012 is over.