A Famous Photograph: Hitchcock Holding a Clapper on the Set of Psycho
Stephen Rebello's book "Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho" is one of the great books about the making of a movie ever written. I think it set the standard for other such books -- including a subcategory of "Making of Hitchcock movie" books: Vertigo, Marnie, Frenzy.
One of the interesting claims in the book is that Hitchcock refused to allow the unit photographer to take photos of "key scenes" in Psycho. Evdiently, the photographer begged Hitchcock to let him photograph these scenes "for posterity" -- but Hitchcock wanted no leaks of the big shocks or twist in Psycho to get out via photographs.
Looking at the production stills for Psycho seems to bear this out. There are stills are Norman on the porch talking with Marion; Norman in the office talking to Arbogast; Norman in the office talking to Sam and Lila. One shot of the highway cop scene(a bit of crime thriller stuff here -- the money.)
Rebello's contention is belied that we have ONE (and only one) shot of Hitchcock standing outside the famous shower(no water running) and directing Janet Leigh within it. That must have given away something. It also could be used to refute Saul Bass's statement that HE directed the shower scene (or does it? Bass said Hitchcock was THERE, but allowed him to actually direct the shots. Hmm.)
No shots of Arbogast in the foyer or on the staircase. Indeed, poor Martin Balsam seemed to merit only three photographs of his work -- two on set, one posed for the studio -- and only ONE of those really has survived (Arbogast in the office with Norman.) The other two -- Arbogast on the porch with Norman and Balsam sitting in a chair with a cigarette -- are hard to find.
(Gus Van Sant, bless him, gave William H. Macy a few photographs for the Psycho remake of note -- one has Macy indeed standing at the bottom of the stairs in trepidation, the other has Macy performing a bit cut from both the original Psycho and the Van Sant: Arbogast flipping the OPEN sign to CLOSED in Loomis Hardware.)
Balsam wasn't invited the day that Leigh, Gavin, and Miles all posed for some "1960 cheesy" group shots in fear of a rocking chair. (Leigh and Miles don't appear together in the movie -- Leigh's too dead when Miles shows up, but seeing them together here feels historic.)
Anthony Perkins posed alone for all manner of evocative shots. The one with his hand over his mouth and the other hand outstretched, became famous, but there are plenty of other famous ones: standing under the owl, one in his jacket with his arms wrapped around himself(this became the TV Guide photo for showings of Psycho.)
And then there was the biggest star of Psycho: Alfred Hitchcock. That year at least(1960, thanks to the TV show and recent movies.) With that cast at least(Hitchcock didn't have to print a lotta shots of Cary Grant.)
Hitchcock was photographed on set with Janet Leigh(in Marion's bedroom and in Cabin One), with Perkins(ALSO in Cabin One, plus near the swamp), with Miles (in NORMAN's bedroom up at the house.) To see Hitchcock inserted into these famous fictional scenes is rather weird -- he becomes a PART of Psycho in those rooms with those stars.
Hitchcock was also photographed by, and in, a canvas Director's Chair marked "MRS. BATES." Ah, how clever for posterity.
But for all of those photos, the one of Hitchcock on the Psycho set that became MOST famous seems to have been a bit of a "well-staged lark."
Hitchcock is standing alone, in the Bates Motel office set. He holds the actual "clapper" being used to mark the film being shot that day for later editing. The clapper has some words and numbers printed, others "chalked in" for temporary use:
"PSYCHO" 9401
DIR. MR. HITCHCOCK
CAM. J.RUSSELL
1-29-60 DAY: (Blacked out)
TR 8/ 6
Hmm. Content-wise, I can't say I know EXACTLY all the information being imparted. 9401? Is the the production number? The 9, 401st flim to be made at Paramount? Or at Universal(where the soundstage is.)
TR 8? 6? Scene 8? Take 6? I have no idea.
The DAY is blacked out. I know this: it was late in the production, perhaps over schedule.
And the day is now "locked in" for film history. On January 29, 1960, Alfred Hitchcock stood on the set of a movie called Psycho and did his job. He --and we -- could have no idea how that day's work would reverberate over the decades, from one century into the next.
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