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Drawing by John C. Tibbetts |
New Hitchcock books, bless ‘em!, just keep a-comin, as Ma Joad says in
The Grapes of Wrath. Back in the day, I myself was proud to be an executive editor with author Thomas Leitch of
The Encyclopedia of Alfred Hitchcock in 2002.
But the appearance of a new book grabbed immediately my attention, on this day, his birthday (August 13th).
Hitchcock a la Carte, by Jan Olsson, tracks and discusses the many television shows Hitchcock appeared in, as both host and (sometimes) as director. I refer, of course to the six seasons of
Alfred Hitchcock Presents, a dramatic anthology series of half-hour programs on CBS and NBC, which ran from 1955-1962.
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour followed, from 1962-1965. Of a total of 251 episodes, Hitchcock directed eighteen, and stepping in were other luminaries, including Robert Stevens (49 episodes), Paul Henreid (29 episodes), and many others, like Robert Altman, Ida Lupino, William Friedkin, John Brahm, and Sidney Pollack. Not to be forgotten was
Suspicion, 1957-1959, another hour-long series, for which Hitch directed the outstanding first episode, “Four O’Clock,” adapted from Cornel Woolrich— literally a “ticking bomb” of a story.
How vividly I remember as boy raptly watching the Monday night telecasts, delighted and teased by the modicum of menace, even limited gore, allowed by the television censors. An equally vivid memory is hearing my father vent his frustration when Hitch always appeared at the end, to explain, at the behest of those same censors, that in the end the crooks got their just desserts, after all.
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Drawing by John C. Tibbetts |
With his macabre humor and irreverence toward advertisers (his appearances were ghost-written by JimmyAllaradice), “Hitchcock was an instant hit on television,” writes author Olsson, “and his performance as host was sensational very cleverly crafted.” Success “in a medium with a deeper cultural penetration than cinema” turned him into “a fully-fledged celebrity” and had “repercussions for his cinema and particularly its marketing.”
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Drawing by John C. Tibbetts |
Among the episodes Hitch personally directed, and which are personal
favorites, were ones adapted from a number of stories by modern masters
of macabre humor. For example, John Collier was represented by “Wet
Saturday” and “Back for Christmas” (both 1956); and Roald Dahl by “Dip
in the Pool” (1958), “Lamb to the Slaughter” (1958), and, perhaps best
of all, “Mrs. Bixby and the Colonel’s Coat” (1960). Two more Dahl
stories, but not Hitchcock-directed, were “The Landlady” and “Man from
the South.” Everybody should remember the latter, starring Steve
McQueen as a gambler caught up in a game whose high stakes included the
potential loss of a finger from a chopper.
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Drawing by John C. Tibbetts |
We are reminded that concurrent with the television episodes was the production and release of PSYCHO in 1960, whose black-and-white images and production crew were drawn from his television colleagues.
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Drawing by John C. Tibbetts |
Hitchcock a la Carte
is a book to savor. Keep it at hand as you watch those wonderful boxed
sets of the half-hour programs. And as you watch “Lamb to the
Slaughter,” consult the book to learn about the changes in the teleplay
which Dahl agreed to at the behest of Hitchcock producer Joan Harrison.
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