15 Fun Facts About ‘Trading Places’

The John Landis-directed comedy classic helped turn stars Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd into household names.

In Trading Places, millionaires Randolph (Ralph Bellamy) and Mortimer (Don Ameche) Duke can’t agree on the whole nature versus nurture theory. So they decide to bet $1 on it and determine the winner by installing homeless con artist Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) in the old job at their firm held by Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd), who was set up to lose everything by the Duke brothers.

When the two find out about the bet, they seek revenge. In honor of its 40th anniversary, check out these fun facts about the 1983 comedy classic that helped turn its two lead stars into household names.

1. The idea was inspired by a tennis game.

“There were these two brothers who were both doctors who I would play tennis with on a fairly regular basis, and they were incredibly irritating to play with because they had a major sibling rivalry going, all the time about everything,” screenwriter Timothy Harris told Insider in 2013. He presented the idea of brothers arguing the nature versus nurture debate to his writing partner, Herschel Weingrod, and the two went to work.

2. The screenwriters hung out with drunk traders for research.

“The traders I met and hung out with here in L.A., because it was three hours behind New York, had their happy-hours very early in the day,” Weingrod told NPR in 2013. “You can imagine what they were like by, maybe, 2 p.m.”

3. It was originally a vehicle for Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder, titled Black and White.

Gene Wilder, Richard Pryor
Comedy legend Richard Pryor almost appeared alongside Gene Wilder in this flick. | Hulton Archive/GettyImages

Comedian Richard Pryor was originally attached to the project alongside Gene Wilder, but as director John Landis put it, he then “unfortunately set himself on fire.”

4. Landis didn’t know who Eddie Murphy was.

John Landis at the Burke & Hare - Press Conference: The 5th International Rome Film Festival
Director John Landis initially had no clue who Eddie Murphy even was. | Pascal Le Segretain/GettyImages

Murphy was still an up-and-coming star when the casting was underway. “48 Hrs(1982) hadn’t come out yet, but they’d previewed it, and Eddie Murphy had previewed very well, and they thought, ‘Ah, this kid’s going to be a star,’” Landis recalled of his discussions with Paramount Pictures. “So they said, ‘What do you think about Eddie Murphy playing the Billy Ray Valentine part?’ And I of course said, ‘Who’s Eddie Murphy?’”

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