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ME
AND HITCH
Chapter
1
March 26, 1997 marked twenty-one years
since the world premiere of Alfred Hitchcock's last film,
Family Plot. My working relationship with him started
some forty-one years earlier, when he bought a short story
of mine for his then half-hour television show. It ended on
May 1, 1963 when I was abruptly replaced as the screenwriter
for Marnie, his film then in development. What goes
around comes around.
Ironically, the short story was titled
Vicious Circle, and it was originally published
in Real magazine in March 1953. This was nineteen months
before publication of The Blackboard Jungle, and I
was still writing a melange of short stories and a
handful of paperback mystery novels in an attempt to earn
a living for myself and my family. The story was about the
rise of a small-time hood, culminating in a gangland murder
with a surprise twist -- just the sort of clever mystery fare
Hitch was offering on his enormously popular weekly show.
In its original half-hour format, Alfred
Hitchcock Presents had premiered on October 2, 1955. Most
people who watched the show assumed that he directed each
and every episode. In fact, many people believed he also wrote
the shows' scripts. Hitch did nothing to disabuse anyone
of these notions. Years later, when I told one of my sons'
friends that I had written the screenplay for The Birds,
the kid said, "No, you didn't, Alfred Hitchcock did."
Actually, of the 372 episodes filmed during the lifetime of
the television show Hitch directed only twenty. Bernard Schoenfeld
wrote the teleplay for Vicious Circle. Paul Henreid
directed it.
In both the half-hour format and the hour-long
format the show later assumed, Hitch would do a little tongue-in-cheek
introduction before the story began, and would then continue
with amusing little bits during the commercial breaks. These
monologues, coupled with the short cameo appearances he made
in all of his films, resulted in him becoming the most highly
visible director in the world. I sincerely doubt that many
movie-goers today would recognize Steven Spielberg if he walked
into a restaurant unannounced. When Hitch walked in,
everyone knew who he was.
I did not know him personally when his
Shamley Productions bought my story, and I was not asked to
adapt it for television. Joan Harrison, the show's producer,
knew my work because by then The Blackboard Jungle had
been published and the sensational movie based upon it had
been released. At the time, however I'd written only one or
two teleplays and no screenplays at all, and I'm sure Joan
had no inkling that I was anything but a novelist and short
story writer. I'd have been astonished if she'd asked me to
write the teleplay of my own story. In fact, the only time
I saw the TV version was when it aired for the first time
in April of 1957.
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