Dial "H" for Happy Birthday

Remembering Alfred Hitchcock, The "Master of Suspense"

This Saturday if you feel a chill in the air, a slight tingle up your spine, or the sensation that you're being watched it may be because August 13 is no ordinary day. It's the day that Alfred J. Hitchcock was born. The "Master of Suspense," as he came to be known, was born in London on August 13, 1899, the youngest of three children to a strict Catholic household. Hitchcock famously explored themes of innocence and wickedness in his films, which many attribute to the exacting standards he was expected to abide by as a child. 

Gifted with a creative streak, Hitchcock's first job was that of a draftsman and advertising designer. Soon after, he began writing short fiction, often suspenseful thrillers that appeared in The Henley Telegraph in the early 1920s. When the film studio Famous Players-Lasky opened a branch in London, Hitchcock began employment as a title card designer, eventually working as a screenwriter, art director, and assistant director. It was also at Famous Players-Lasky where Hitchcock met Alma Reville, who would not only go on to become one of his most trusted collaborators and creative advisers but also his wife. The pair wed in 1926 and were married until 1980, when Hitchcock passed away at the age of 80 of natural causes. Reville served as writer, script supervisor, editor and assistant director on dozens of Hitchcock's films and is credited as having encouraged her husband to use the infamous stringed instrument composition by Bernard Herrmann during the shower scene of Psycho.

Hitchcock came to Hollywood in 1939, where he would truly revolutionize the world of cinema. His suspenseful films, violent thrillers as much as they were psychological ones, became his calling card, though he did dabble in other genres. In honor of what would be the great filmmaker's 117th birthday, we're featuring seven Hitchcock classics from the Warner Bros. Library. You may want to leave a light on.

Mr. and Mrs. Smith


Hitchcock directed Carole Lombard and Robert Montgomery in this 1940 screwball comedy. A rare gem indeed.
 

Gene Raymond as Jeff Custer and Carole Lombard as Ann Smith wearing scarf

Gene Raymond as Jeff Custer and Carole Lombard as Ann Smith in Mr. and Mrs. Smith.

Suspicion

Full shot of Cary Grant as Johnnie leading Joan Fontaine as Lina upstairs.

A shadowy Cary Grant with Joan Fontaine, who won the Oscar for Best Actress for her role as Lina McLaidlaw, in Suspicion.

Wide angle shot of dinner table with Joan Fontaine as Lina McLaidlaw Aysgarth, Nondas Metcalf as Phyllis Swinghurst, Cary Grant as Johnnie Aysgarth, Auriol Lee as Isobel Sedbusk and Gavin Gordon as Bertram Sedbusk

A master of mise-en-scène, Hitchcock wasn't afraid to frame a scene with an actor's back to the camera.
 

Cary Grant as Johnnie Aysgarth and director Alfred Hitchcock.

Though his movies were often serious affairs, Hitchcock was a notorious prankster with a keen sense of humor. Here he shares a laugh on the set of Suspicion with Cary Grant.

Stage Fright

Marlene Dietrich as Charlotte Inwood wearing nightgown, standing with Richard Todd as Jonathan Cooper.

Marlene Dietrich and Richard Todd star in the murder mystery Stage Fright. The film is one of Dietrich's finest and allows her to showcase both her talents as an actress and singer. In fact, Cole Porter wrote the tune, "The Laziest Gal in Town" expressly for her for this picture.

Medium shot through ladder of Richard Todd standing with Jane Wyman as Eve Gill.

Hitchcock often utilized a sense of voyeurism, like this shot looking through the blinds of a window in Stage Fright
 

Strangers on a Train


The dirtiest of deals: I'll kill yours, you kill mine. Hitchcock explores the duality of human nature. The more you watch, the more you'll see in this first-class mystery thriller.

Farley Granger as Guy Haines standing on departing train holding tennis racquet, suitcase and looking at director Alfred Hitchcock (in cameo), boarding train and holding double bass.
 

Hitchcock famously placed himself in cameos in dozens of his movies. As they became more popular he needed to appear earlier in the films to prevent audiences from becoming too distracted by looking for the famous director. Here he boards a train as Farley Granger departs in Strangers on a Train.

I Confess


In this unusual thriller, Montgomery Clift plays a man of the cloth who hears a murderer's confession and winds up implicating himself in the crime due to the sanctity of his Vows and the Confessional.

Montgomery Cliff in \"I Confess\"

Montgomery Clift struggles with his conscience in I Confess.

I Confess French poster art

Hitchcock had become so well-known that by 1953 his own image was appearing on poster art, as in this French version I Confess.

Dial "M" for Murder

Grace Kelly as Margot Wendice, laying face up on desk, struggles with Anthony Dawson as Captain Swan Lesgate.

The "icy blonde" became a hallmark throughout Hitchcock's films, such as Grace Kelly (above, with Anthony Dawn in Dial "M" for Murder). As for his leading ladies, Hitchcock once expressed his preference as, "The perfect ‘woman of mystery’ is one who is blonde, subtle and Nordic."

Alfred Hitchcock standing behind oversize prop telephone.

Hitchcock stands idly by with a prop in this behind-the-scenes photo from Dial "M" for Murder.

North by Northwest


Part of the American Film Institute's Top 100 American Films, North by Northwest is considered one of Hitchcock's greatest thrillers. Espionage, mistaken identity and a nonstop game of cat-and-mouse, this film leaves audiences breathless.

Cary Grant in North by Northwest

Cary Grant paired up with the venerable director for the fourth and final time in North by Northwest.

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After Hitchcock's passing in 1980, Variety noted that despite being an intensely private person, that aside from Charlie Chaplin, was there ever a director so instantly recognizable or had one's name been so tied to a style of film. And it seems that the man himself would have agreed. On his style of movie making Hitchcock once said: 

I'm a typed director. If I made Cinderella, the audience would immediately be looking for a body in the coach.