Anthony Perkins and Martin Balsam 10 years after Psycho: Catch-22 (1970)
I do believe that of the "Psycho five" (Perkins, Leigh, Balsam, Miles, Gavin) very few of them worked with each other after that classic.
Universal contract players Gavin and Miles did -- in "Back Street," one year later in 1961, which reminded us : they were Universal contract players.
Tony Perkins and Janet Leigh never worked together again -- a good thing.
But Tony Perkins and Martin Balsam ended up working together TWO more times:
Catch-22 1970
Murder on the Orient Express 1974
This Psycho fan found that catnip back then in those years -- after all, they were my favorite two characters and actors in Psycho(sorry, Janet, you were good in a different way) and here they were pitched together a couple more times.
Catch-22 is perhaps more pointedly examined because it came out almost exactly ten years after Psycho -- and also in a "zero" year: 1970 versus 1960 for Psycho.
I watched Catch-22 and read up on it the other day and gave some of my time to examining where Perkins and Balsam WERE 10 years after Psycho. It was revelatory.
First of all, both Catch-22 and Orient Express have alphabetical cast listings , so Martin Balsam went ahead of Perkins both times -- his credit lettering the same size AS Perkins (not so in Psycho, where Balsam has to share smaller type "co-starring Martin Balsam and John McIntire" credit.
Moreover, in Catch-22 after Alan Arkin gets the "star credit" before everybody else, we get this credit "Starring Martin Balsam" and nobody AFTER Balsam gets that word ("starring.") Thus, by default, Balsam was kinda sorta a star and kinda sort bigger than Anthony Perkins now.
Balsam plays one of the villains of Catch-22: Colonel Cathcart, who keeps raising the number of death-defying missions his men must fly , thus increasing the chances of death. The role was first offered to George C. Scott(who turned it down because it was too much like his role in Strangelove) and then cast with Stacy Keach who was fired by Mike Nichols as "too young for the role." Balsam was flown down to the isolated Guymas Mexico location post haste.
Balsam was 40 when he played Arbogast, and one realizes now that he probably would never look so good again. He was stocky but trim, with a round bald head but a handsome face(framed by huge black eyebrows -- eyebrows make the movie actor) Nattily attired in suit and hat, Balsam gave Arbogast a kind of precise air. He wasn't sloppy.
Balsam was 50 when he played Colonel Cathcart, and as it comes to many stocky men...weight in the belly started to show up. His head was still round but the face was a bit fleshy, the looks were still handsome enough, but..the years and food and gravity started taking their toll.
So Balsam made up for it (as Nicholson and Pacino would later when THEY aged) by playing up his deep resonant voice. As Cathcart, its a blaring, yelling, honking voice. Roger Ebert wrote "Martin Balsam overacts, but it may not be his fault." Perhaps director Mike Nichols fault?
As per the novel, Balsam is paired -- Tweedle-Dee/Tweedle Dum style -- with Buck Henry as Colonel Korn(Kernel Korn, get it?) and together they bedevil Alan Arkin as Yossarian and browbeat other unfortunates along the way.
Enter Anthony Perkins. I'm not sure he gets as much screen time as Balsam, but he's well cast as "Chaplain Tappman," a man of the cloth whom everyone calls "Father" even as he says that doesn't apply. He's the religious man trying to comfort men who are either in terror, alive but ripped apart, or dead...and its hard. And -- given the tone of this movie -- a little bit funny.
Anthony Perkins was about 28 when he made Psycho(27?) so he was about 38 (37?) when he made Catch-22. Against poor Martin Balsam at 50, Perkins still had a lot of boyish youth to him, and was still skinny as a rail( he would always be, sometimes TOO skinny.) The only noticeable difference from 1960 Norman is longer hair(in a 1970 WWII story) and the creeping-up beginning of that sing-song , rather fake line delivery he would perfect unto disaster in the Psycho sequels, a little bit worse each time. Its just STARTING here, not that bad yet, but noticeable.
Its 1970, so a famous scene between Perkins and Balsam in Catch 22 has Perkins coming in to speak to Colonel Cathcart(at Cathcart's request) and finding Cathcart barking commands...while sitting on the toilet. If Psycho in 1960 could show a toilet for the first time, Catch-22 in 1970 could show a man using it "that way." It is still a disconcerting bit...and Perkins plays it for all the embarrassment and flustered tics he can muster.
Perkins and Balsam had made Psycho for a great director of long standing(47 films or so by then.) Perkins and Balsam made Catch-22 for a great director of short standing(2 films, but doozies -- Virginia Woolf and The Graduate.) For this, both actors could be grateful I suppose -- "masters" of then and now wanted to hire them.