Cast and Characters (Air Force One) Air Force One

Principal Cast

President James Marshall — Harrison Ford

A Vietnam veteran, Medal of Honor recipient, and the sitting President of the United States, Marshall refuses to evacuate via the escape pod when terrorists hijack his plane and instead fights back from the cargo hold. Ford at 54 was in the last stretch of his run as Hollywood's default action lead, and the role crystallized everything audiences associated with him — moral clarity, physical competence, reluctant heroism.

Ford met President Bill Clinton and Glenn Close at a birthday party in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and used the encounter to cast both the film and his own preparation. He asked Close to play the vice president and asked Clinton to arrange a tour of the real Air Force One for the filmmakers. Both requests were granted.

"And I asked Glenn if she would play the vice president, which was written for a woman, by the way, and I asked the president if he could arrange for myself and my fellow filmmakers to have a tour of the airplane. Both of my desires were accomplished, happily." — Harrison Ford, Charlie Rose (1997)

A 2016 Wall Street Journal poll named Ford's James Marshall the greatest fictional U.S. president. Ford himself has said this is the movie he most often quotes in real life. (collider, wikipedia)

Screenwriter Andrew W. Marlowe wrote the role with Ford in mind from the start:

"He was at the top of my mind when I was writing it." — Andrew W. Marlowe, Syfy Wire (2021)

The Hollywood Reporter's Duane Byrge captured what the casting achieved:

"It's hard to remember when someone acted so presidential. Ford is forthright, charismatic, brave and honorable." — Duane Byrge, The Hollywood Reporter (1997)

Egor Korshunov — Gary Oldman

A former political commentator for Moscow Radio turned ultranationalist militant, Korshunov leads six Radek loyalists in hijacking Air Force One to force the release of General Ivan Radek. He is not a cartoon villain — he articulates genuine geopolitical grievances about the collapse of the Soviet Union and American interference in the former Soviet states. His motivation is ideological conviction, not greed.

Oldman's on-set demeanor was the opposite of his character. Director Wolfgang Petersen nicknamed the production "Air Force Fun" because Oldman was so genial and comedic between takes, only to snap into cold menace the moment the cameras rolled. Ford instructed Oldman to actually hit him during their fight scenes. (flipthemoviescript)

Variety's Todd McCarthy praised the performance:

"Oldman registers strongly as a veteran of the Afghan campaign pushed to desperate lengths to newly ennoble his country." — Todd McCarthy, Variety (1997)

Vice President Kathryn Bennett — Glenn Close

Bennett manages the crisis from the White House Situation Room while Marshall fights on the plane. She faces pressure from the Secretary of Defense and the Attorney General to invoke the Twenty-Fifth Amendment and remove Marshall from power. She refuses.

Close shaped the character through direct refusal. The script originally included a scene where Bennett breaks down crying at the Situation Room table. Close said no:

"One thing I remember, they had a scene around that table where she broke down crying. And I said, 'I will not do that. I don't think that would happen. Not my vice president. My vice president would not break down into tears. She would step up to the challenge.'" — Glenn Close, The Hollywood Reporter (2020)

The filmmakers changed the scene. Clinton himself encouraged Close to take the role, telling her at the Jackson Hole party: "You'd make a great Vice President." Twenty-four years before the country elected its first female Vice President, Close played one as an ordinary fact of governance. (variety)

Agent Gibbs — Xander Berkeley

The Secret Service mole who enables the hijacking. Gibbs disables the plane's security systems and provides the terrorists access to their weapons. Screenwriter Marlowe originally conceived Gibbs with an elaborate financial backstory — a man whose career never matched his ambitions:

"A guy whose career never got to where he wanted it to be and he could never afford the things he wanted in life." — Andrew W. Marlowe, SlashFilm (2021)

Petersen cut the backstory exposition, reasoning: "Hey, we can't stop the movie when it's the face-off between the president and the Secret Service agent to have this explanation." What survived was a single line from Korshunov — "Mr. President, do you know how I got on this plane? Money" — which Marlowe noted served the villain's thesis that capitalism corrupts loyalty. (slashfilm)

Supporting Cast

Actor Role
Wendy Crewson First Lady Grace Marshall
Liesel Matthews Alice Marshall
Dean Stockwell Secretary of Defense Walter Dean
William H. Macy Major Norman Caldwell
Paul Guilfoyle Chief of Staff Lloyd Shepherd
Philip Baker Hall Attorney General Andrew Ward
Jürgen Prochnow General Ivan Radek
Sources