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To Academy Oral Histories Peggy Robertson
Index to Academy Oral Histories Peggy Robertson Peggy Robertson (Script supervisor, Assistant to Alfred Hitchcock) Call number: OH131 The Academy (London theater), 6 Academy Awards, 137, 213, 264-265, 304-305, 379 ADAM AND EVELYNE, 12 ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS (television), 170, 203 Allardice, James, 196 Allen, Jay Presson, 276-277, 281 American Film Institute, 379-380 Andrews, Julie, 149, 286, 288-289 Antonioni, Michelangelo, 226, 299 Arosenius, Per-Axel, 319 Arrigo, Frank, 282-283 Asprey's (jewelry store), 118 Asquith, Anthony, 17, 19 Association of Cine Technicians (A.C.T.), 27, 56-57, 127 Baird, Teddy, 24 Baker, Diane, 240, 259-260, 277, 280 Balcon, Michael, 77 Bass, Saul, 204-205 Bates, Michael, 358 Batliner, William, 282 Beeson, Paul, 106-107 Bergdorf Goodman (department store), 178, 257-258 Bergman, Ingrid, 86, 88-89, 94-98, 111-112, 222, 354, 380 Berkeley, Ballard, 110 Bernstein, Sidney, 102-103, 222 Berwick, Ray, 234, 237, 256 THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES, 79 THE BIRDS, 168, 199, 228-229, 232-264, 267-268, 271-272, 277, 282, 289 Black, Karen, 365-366 BLACK CHIFFON (play), 84, 141 BLACK CHIFFON (unproduced film), 61, 84, 141-143 BLACK NARCISSUS, 71 Bodega Bay, California (location shooting), 238 Bogdanovich, Peter, 188, 274-275, 380-381 Boileau, Pierre, 199 Bone, Bob, 255 Booth, Margaret, 190 Boucher, Anthony, 201, 229 Boyle, Robert, 108, 178, 185-186, 189, 195, 234, 246-247, 255, 282, 298, 374, 378 Bridie, James, 89 Brown, James H., 244 Brown, Ned, 277 Browne, Roscoe Lee, 301, 312, 318 A Bullet in the Ballet (novel), 135 Bullock's -
Perkins, Anthony (1932-1992) by Tina Gianoulis
Perkins, Anthony (1932-1992) by Tina Gianoulis Encyclopedia Copyright © 2015, glbtq, Inc. Entry Copyright © 2007 glbtq, Inc. Reprinted from http://www.glbtq.com The life and career of actor Anthony Perkins seems almost like a movie script from the times in which he lived. One of the dark, vulnerable anti-heroes who gained popularity during Hollywood's "post-golden" era, Perkins began his career as a teen heartthrob and ended it unable to escape the role of villain. In his personal life, he often seemed as tortured as the troubled characters he played on film, hiding--and perhaps despising--his true nature while desperately seeking happiness and "normality." Perkins was born on April 4, 1932 in New York City, the only child of actor Osgood Perkins and Janet Esseltyn Rane. His father died when he was only five, and Perkins was reared by his strong-willed and possibly abusive mother. He followed his father into the theater, joining Actors Equity at the age of fifteen and working backstage until he got his first acting roles in summer stock productions of popular plays like Junior Miss and My Sister Eileen. He continued to hone his acting skills while attending Rollins College in Florida, performing in such classics as Harvey and The Importance of Being Earnest. Perkins was an unhappy young man, and the theater provided escape from his loneliness and depression. "There was nothing about me I wanted to be," he told Mark Goodman in a People Weekly interview. "But I felt happy being somebody else." During his late teens, Perkins went to Hollywood and landed his first film role in the 1953 George Cukor production, The Actress, in which he appeared with Spencer Tracy. -
Hitchcock's Appetites
McKittrick, Casey. "Epilogue." Hitchcock’s Appetites: The corpulent plots of desire and dread. New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2016. 159–163. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 28 Sep. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501311642.0011>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 28 September 2021, 08:18 UTC. Copyright © Casey McKittrick 2016. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. Epilogue itchcock and his works continue to experience life among generation Y Hand beyond, though it is admittedly disconcerting to walk into an undergraduate lecture hall and see few, if any, lights go on at the mention of his name. Disconcerting as it may be, all ill feelings are forgotten when I watch an auditorium of eighteen- to twenty-one-year-olds transported by the emotions, the humor, and the compulsions of his cinema. But certainly the college classroom is not the only guardian of Hitchcock ’ s fl ame. His fi lms still play at retrospectives, in fi lm festivals, in the rising number of fi lm studies classes in high schools, on Turner Classic Movies, and other networks devoted to the “ oldies. ” The wonderful Bates Motel has emerged as a TV serial prequel to Psycho , illustrating the formative years of Norman Bates; it will see a second season in the coming months. Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour are still in strong syndication. Both his fi lms and television shows do very well in collections and singly on Amazon and other e-commerce sites. -
30 April 2010 Page 1 of 15 SATURDAY 24 APRIL 2010 Show of Hands Methods and Subject Matter
Radio 4 Listings for 24 – 30 April 2010 Page 1 of 15 SATURDAY 24 APRIL 2010 Show of Hands methods and subject matter. SAT 00:00 Midnight News (b00s0zxc) Helen Mark visits the landscapes that have inspired award In the glamorous setting of the flamboyant Goan film festival, The latest national and international news from BBC Radio 4. winning folk group Show of Hands who have won many awards we'll discover how huge Gurinder is there, and talk to Indian Followed by Weather. for their music depicting rural life in Dorset and the West cinemagoers, directors, actors, and movie buffs about the larger Country. Helen meets singer/songwriter Steve Knightley in his than life director, her films, and how, whilst they're clad in their home town of Topsham on the Exe Estuary in Devon. He talks designer labels in a country that's a new world power, they see SAT 00:30 Book of the Week (b00rzrsx) about his love of the area and explains why he chooses to sing the British Asian community as endearingly old fashioned. Michael Chabon - Manhood for Amateurs about the countryside and its people in a way that's earned him the reputation for being 'the gravelly voiced spokesman of the Producer: Lucy Greenwell. Episode 5 rural poor'. The group's song Country Life encapsulates many of the harsher realities of contemporary rural England. Helen A Just Radio production first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in Jason Butler Harner continues to read from Pulitzer prize- meets some of the characters who feature in those songs that 2010. -
08 SM 6/15 (TV Guide)
Page 8 THE NORTON TELEGRAM Tuesday, June 15, 2004 Monday Evening June 21, 2004 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 KHGI/ABC Wife & Kid GLopez According Hope/Fait Weddings Gone Wild Local Local Local Local KBSH/CBS Standing Yes Dear Raymond 21/2Men CSI: Miami Local Late Show Late Late KSNK/NBC Fear Factor For Love Or Money 3 Who Wants to Marry Local Tonight Show Conan FOX North Shore The Casino Local Local Local Local Local Local Cable Channels A&E Pride Pride Pride AMC Mississippi Burning Jaws 2 Escape Fr ANIM Growing Up Cell Dogs Animal Precinct Growing Up Cell Dogs CNN Paula Zahn Now Larry King Live Newsnight Lou Dobbs Larry King Norton TV DISC Mythbusters Biker Girl Biker Build Off Monster House Biker Girl DISN Kim Possible Raven Sis Bug Juice Lizzie Boy Meets Even E! High Price of Fame Scream Play THS Howard Stern Celebrities Uncensore ESPN Monday Night Baseball Sportscenter Outside Sportscen ESPN2 NCAA College World Series Today At Wimbledon Streetball NBA Final FAM Addams Family Values Whose Lin Whose Lin The 700 Club Funniest Funniest FX Sleeping With The Enemy Nip/Tuck Nip/Tuck Sleeping With the Ene HGTV Smrt Dsgn Decor Ce Organize Dsgn Chal Dsgn Dim Dsgn Dme To Go Hunters Smrt Dsgn Decor Ce HIST Mail Call Color of W Band of Brothers Investigating History Question of Conspirac Mail Call Color of W LIFE Providence Stranger at the Door Golden Gr Golden Gr Nanny Nanny MTV Newlywed Must List Road Rule Road Rule Road Rule Faking Vid Making/G Special Video Clash Listings: NICK Fairly Odd Sabrina Full Hous Full Hous -
Curriculum Vitae: Bruce F. Kawin
October 30, 2020 Curriculum Vitae: Bruce F. Kawin Professor Emeritus of English University of Colorado at Boulder Boulder, CO 80309 Home: 4393 13th St. Boulder, CO 80304 Phone: (303) 449-4845 (land line) — (303) 514-6707 (cell; use this or e-mail until further notice) Fax: (303) 449-2503 E-mail: [email protected] Born: Los Angeles, CA Education: Ph.D.: Cornell University, September 1970 Major: 20th Century British and American Literature Minor: Film History and Aesthetics Thesis: Telling It Again and Again: The Aesthetics of Repetition M.F.A.: Cornell University, June 1969 Major: Creative Writing Minor: Filmmaking Thesis: Slides Summer program in Documentary Film Production, UCLA, August 1968 B.A. cum laude: Columbia College, Columbia University, June 1967 Major: English and Comparative Literature Teaching Experience: Professor of English: English Department, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1975-2015. (Professor Emeritus, 2015-present; Full Professor since 1980; tenure awarded, 1979; Associate Professor, 1977- 80; Assistant Professor, 1975-77.) Taught half-time in Film Studies Program 1975-2006 (two Film Studies courses/year), then one Film Studies course/year through 2014; other film courses after 2006 taught in English Dept. Fields: Modern Literature, Film History and Theory, Creative Writing. Visiting Fellow: Theater Arts Board, College 5, University of California at Santa Cruz, 1980-81. Fields: Film History and Theory. Specialist in Film Analysis: Center for Advanced Film Studies, American Film Institute, 1974. Lecturer in English and Film: English Department, University of California at Riverside, 1973-75. Fields: Modern Literature, Film History, Composition, Women Studies. Assistant Professor of English: English Department, Wells College, 1970-73. -
Das Remake Als Fetischkunst Gus Van Sants »Psycho« Und Die Absonderlichen Serialitäten Des Hollywood-Kinos
FORSCHUNGSBEITRAG DAS REMAKE ALS FETISCHKUNST Gus Van Sants »Psycho« und die absonderlichen Serialitäten des Hollywood-Kinos Frank Kelleter 154 RKEMA ING ALS SERIELLE PRAXIS Film-Remakes und Film-Fortsetzungen verkörpern den kommerziellen Prag- matismus des Hollywood-Kinos in schamloser Manier. Kein Wunder, dass sich Feuilleton und Filmwissenschaft lange Zeit nicht mit ihnen anfreunden konnten. Noch heute muss jeder Film, der eine Zahl im Titel trägt, darauf gefasst sein, als Beispiel für die Einfallslosigkeit einer ganzen, eigentlich geldgeilen Industrie herzuhalten. Problematisch ist diese Haltung nicht, weil sie falsch wäre – Remakes und Fortsetzungen operieren tatsächlich als ›pre-sold com- modities‹ –, sondern weil Einfallsreichtum in der Geschichte des populären Films eigentlich immer schon an profitorientierte Produktionskulturen gebun- den war. Wie unbehaglich dieser Gedanke in cinephilen Kreisen weiterhin sein mag, lässt sich daran ablesen, dass die Figur des sich gegen ökonomische Zwänge behauptenden ›Auteurs‹ die Rede über Filme selbst dort noch orga- nisiert, wo die proklamierten filmtheoretischen Überzeugungen schon längst das Gegenteil behaupten. Das Problem filmischer Autorschaft steht im Zentrum von Gus Van Sants »Psycho« und vermengt sich dort in irritierender Weise mit Fragen medialer Selbstreflexion und narrativer Fortsetzungslogik. Um zu verstehen, was hier geschieht, bietet es sich an, das Format ›Neuverfilmung‹ zunächst einmal seri- alitätstheoretisch zu beschreiben. Auf den ersten Blick ist das eine kontrain- tuitive Perspektive: Remakes behaupten ja in aller Regel nicht, Episoden oder Fortsetzungen eines größeren Erzählganzen zu sein. Dennoch fällt es schwerer, POP. Kultur und Kritik ◆ Heft 7 Herbst 2015 ◆ S. 154–173 ◆ © transcript zwischen einer Neuverfilmung und einer Fortsetzung formal zu unterscheiden, als diese scheinbar eindeutigen Begriffe vermuten lassen (Verevis 2006a; siehe auch einzelne Beiträge in Heinze/Krämer 2015). -
Hitchcock Blonde
42nd Season • 405th Production SEGERSTROM STAGE / FEBRUARY 3 - MARCH 12, 2006 David Emmes Martin Benson PRODUCING ARTISTIC DIRECTOR ARTISTIC DIRECTOR presents the American premiere of HITCHCOCK BLONDE written and directed by Terry Johnson William Dudley Chris Parry Ian Dickinson Ian Galloway for Mesmer SCENIC/COSTUME/VIDEO DESIGN LIGHTING DESIGN COMPOSER/SOUND DESIGN VIDEO REALIZATION Magdalena Zira Jeff Gifford Jamie A. Tucker* ASSISTANT DIRECTOR PRODUCTION MANAGER STAGE MANAGER Valerie and Geoff Fearns HONORARY PRODUCERS Hitchcock Blonde • SOUTH COAST REPERTORY P1 THE CAST (in order of appearance) Jennifer .................................................................................. Adriana DeMeo* Alex ............................................................................................. Robin Sachs* Hitch ..................................................................................... Dakin Matthews* Blonde ...................................................................................... Sarah Aldrich* Husband .................................................................................... Martin Noyes* LENGTH Approximately two hours and 10 minutes, including one 15-minute intermission. PRODUCTION STAFF Assistant Stage Manager ................................................. Chrissy Church* Casting .............................................................................. Joanne DeNaut Fight Choreographer ............................................................ Martin Noyes Stage Management Intern -
The Girl.My Final Title Page
THE GIRL by Gwyneth Hughes 8th January 2012 hughes/the girl 13.01.2012 page 1 1 INT. TV SCREEN - DAY 1 Formless shadows dancing in a soft background. Greys, slowly coalescing into blacks and whites. The sound, a patchwork of muffled voices and barely heard music. An impression of wings, and flight. Figures begin to form, but indistinctly, as we realize we are watching a television screen come into focus. It seems there may be two figures involved. Almost, but not quite, two faces. HITCH (V.O.) I’ve got an idea for a love scene, where the two heads will start apart, and then gradually come together. Now the TV screen resolves to show a commercial featuring a beautiful young woman, TIPPI HEDREN, aged 31, carefree and smiling as she looks into the camera. THE GIRL 2 INT. HITCHCOCK HOUSE - KITCHEN - DAY 2 Tippi’s commercial plays on TV in the corner as ALFRED HITCHCOCK, aged 62, washes up the morning coffee cups. He wears an apron over his usual dark suit, white shirt, dark tie. Only at private domestic moments like these do we ever see him without his jacket. He is speaking enthusiastically to someone outside the room. HITCH A quick pan, do you see, from one face to the other, whipping the camera, and as the two faces get closer together, the whipping gets less and less till it’s just a vibration... His wife ALMA brings him a final dirty cup as he finishes his perfect clearing up routine. She is 61, small, bright, determined, unglamorous, and English. -
A Score Complete Without Themes: Henry Mancini and the Frenzy Experience
A SCORE COMPLETE WITHOUT THEMES: HENRY MANCINI AND THE FRENZY EXPERIENCE. PATRICIA CLARE WHEELER-CONDON A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN MUSIC YORK UNIVERSITY, TORONTO, ONTARIO APRIL, 2013 © Patricia Wheeler-Condon, 2013 ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the musical features of, and circumstances surrounding, the film score composed in 1971 by Henry Mancini for director Alfred Hitchcock's ( penultimate work, Frenzy. Mancini's music was rejected by Hitchcock, and replaced with a markedly different work written by British composer Ron Goodwin. A summation of characteristic traits emerging from Mancini's compositional style is herewith considered, as recurring features found in his thematic writing - aspects of melody, harmony, rhythm, timbre, and form-were most apparent to the non-musician film directors who engaged his services. This summation also includes an examination oft4e composer's dramatic underscore writing; an aspect of film music often overlooked in its minutiae by viewers and filmmakers alike, and, in the case of Mancini's Frenzy music, characteristic of his scores for Laslo Bene_dek's 1971 production, The Night Visitor, and Terrence Young's Wait Until Dark, from 1967. Mancini's Frenzy cue sheets, holograph, and recording were supplied by the composer's estate, allowing for an analysis which considers cue placement and length, systems of pitch and rhythmic organisation, aspects of arrangement and orchestration, and conducting and recording methods as practised by this composer. A comparison to the Goodwin score, reproduced by way of transcription from the film, is undertaken in order to explore aspects of filmic point-of-view as they play on the composer of its accompanying music, and to attempt a rationalisation of .Hitchcock's displeasure with Mancini's music. -
© Page 1 Sur 21 Synopsis
Titre original Psycho Réalisation Alfred Hitchcock Scénario Joseph Stefano Anthony Perkins Janet Leigh Acteurs principaux Vera Miles John Gavin Sociétés de Shamley Productions production Pays d’origine États-Unis Genre thriller Sortie 1960 Durée 109 minutes Psychose (Psycho) est un thriller horrifique américain en noir et blanc réalisé par Alfred Hitchcock, sorti en 1960. C'est le 47e long métrage, inspiré par le roman de Robert Bloch Psycho dont le scénario a été écrit par le jeune scénariste Joseph Stefano. Ce film majeur dans la filmographie d'Alfred Hitchcock est considéré comme un chef- d'œuvre1 du suspense et a élevé Anthony Perkins au rang de célébrité du cinéma. Il y interprète Norman Bates, un jeune homme perturbé, propriétaire d'une vieille demeure surplombant le motel dont il est également propriétaire, et où Marion Crane (Janet Leigh), une automobiliste de passage, connaîtra un destin tragique. Un détective privé (Martin Balsam), puis l'amant et la sœur de Marion (Vera Miles), se lanceront à sa recherche. Suspense et horreur se conjuguent pour atteindre leur paroxysme au moment où le mystérieux meurtrier est finalement démasqué. Psychose a fait l'objet de trois suites, toutes avec Anthony Perkins, réalisées en 1983, 1986 et 1990. En 1998, Gus Van Sant en a tourné un remake plan pour plan avec entre autres Vince Vaughn dans le rôle de Norman Bates et Julianne Moore dans celui de Lila Crane. ©http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychose_(film,_1960) Page 1 sur 21 Synopsis En début d'après-midi d'un vendredi de décembre, Marion Crane et Sam Loomis se retrouvent à l'insu de leur entourage dans une chambre de l'Adam's Hotel, à Phoenix (Arizona). -
A 'Thesis Studio' Performance
A ‘THESIS STUDIO’ PERFORMANCE Following the example of ‘24 Psycho’, the concept of thesis is recontextualized in terms of work that is stretched apart to reveal the ‘efficient cause’ and, in this stretching, allow new connections and new original formations. The idea of the fictional artist/architect is employed, in multiples. A studio is envisioned, populated by ghosts whose work, with insightful demonic and angelic accesses, works hard to conceal the fact that the studio members are ‘between the two deaths’ in Lacanian terms … wandering souls who are given one last opportunity to have a successful final thesis project. Psycho (Alfred Hitchcock, 1960). The idea for this film was proffered by Peggy Robertson, a production assistant, who had a positive reaction to the 1959 novel, also named Psycho, by Robert Bloch. Reviewers at Paramount did not think the premise would make a good film, but Hitchcock saw this as an opportunity to recover from two botched earlier projects. The crew and set were lifted from Hitchcock’s television series, ‘Alfred Hitchcock Presents’. The production costs were held to a minimum, although the leading actors, Anthony Perkins and Janet Leigh, were well known enough to be box-office draws. Hitchcock rejected the first treatment as ‘too much like television’. The film is unlike most other Hitchcock films, but it does resemble Lifeboat, Rope, and The Wrong Man in that it emphasizes psychological tension rooted in the psychosis of a character or situation. 24 Psycho. The conceptual-performance artist Douglas Gordon created a new reading of Psycho by presenting the film at 2 frames per second rather than the usual 24.