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  • ...Morehouse, "The book was sent me by the publisher. I was attracted by the market [scenes] and by the central figure, an Air Force man who is always a loser. ...illy]], [[Oxford Street]], [[Bayswater]], Hammersmith, and [[Covent Garden Market]].<ref>{{LDL}}, pages 698-9</ref><ref>[[The Times (11/Jan/1971) - Hitchcock
    28 KB (4,258 words) - 13:14, 2 January 2017
  • ...y]], [[Anthony Shaffer]], [[Barry Foster]], [[Blackmail (1929)]], [[Covent Garden, London]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Jon Finch]], [[Patrick Hamilton]], [[River ...toes peeping delicately out from among the potatoes, the frantic scrabbles about the naked corpse, the ultimate crunching break of rigid fingers, one by one
    5 KB (856 words) - 13:27, 17 January 2014
  • ...[[The Birds (1963)]], [[The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)]], [[The Pleasure Garden (1925)]], [[The Trouble with Harry (1955)]], [[The Wrong Man (1956)]], [[Th ...een]]'', followed in 1925 by his first completed picture, ''[[The Pleasure Garden]]'' and would, over the years, become justifiably celebrated for his growin
    49 KB (7,860 words) - 10:21, 2 March 2014
  • ...y offered him the chance to direct his first feature film, "[[The Pleasure Garden]]" (1925). ...ked in 1925 at [[Emelka Studios]] in Munich, where he made "[[The Pleasure Garden]]" and the now lost "[[The Mountain Eagle]]" (1926). The dominant character
    51 KB (7,964 words) - 19:32, 22 October 2014
  • ...ock" - by Quentin Falk]], [[Alfred Hitchcock]], [[Alma Reville]], [[Covent Garden, London]], [[Donald Spoto]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Islington Studios, London ...rn 100 years ago this summer in lowly Leytonstone. He was famously guarded about his origins, but are there still clues to the great director's work in East
    11 KB (1,903 words) - 15:12, 17 January 2014
  • ...[Bernard Herrmann]], [[Blackmail (1929)]], [[Cary Grant]], [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Gregory Peck]], [[I ...offered a training in virility. But ''Psycho'' dealt with seamier matters, about which the grown-ups went into whispered conclave. The moralistic aunt claim
    21 KB (3,728 words) - 15:52, 12 March 2014
  • ...o]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London]], [[Ivor Novello]], [[Jon Finch]], [[Martin Scorsese]], [[Pinewood ...any of the actors and a different picture emerges. "The strange tradition about Hitchcock treating actors like cattle was nowhere in evidence," remembers [
    10 KB (1,688 words) - 07:03, 27 June 2014
  • ...Barry Foster]], [[Cary Grant]], [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[Covent Garden, London]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Gilbert Taylor]], [[Jon Finch]], [[Michael '''Murder with comedy at Covent Garden Market'''
    5 KB (913 words) - 22:46, 2 June 2014
  • * Production begins on ''[[The Pleasure Garden]]'', {{Hitchcock}}'s directorial debut.<ref>{{LDL}}, page 69</ref> * '''6th''' - The production crew for ''The Pleasure Garden'' depart Munich for Genoa. En route, their film stock is confiscated by Cus
    170 KB (25,657 words) - 23:00, 15 July 2021
  • ...tha]], [[Pinewood Studios]], [[Ronald Neame]], [[Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London]], [[Sidney Gilliat]], [[Target for Tonight (1941)]], [[Tom Ryall]] ...lish adultery story Brief Encounter (1945) and Carol Reed's post-war black-market thriller The Third Man (1949) both won the critics' prize at [[Cannes]]; [[
    23 KB (3,536 words) - 14:31, 25 February 2015
  • ...lie Whitelaw]], [[Cary Grant]], [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[Covent Garden, London]], [[Frank Launder]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Gilbert Taylor]], [[Jame <indent>''* As with PSYCHO, about fifteen years has been knocked off the main character's age in FRENZY'S tra
    16 KB (2,561 words) - 07:24, 23 February 2015
  • ...ma]], [[Cary Grant]], [[Chicago, Illinois]], Consumerism, [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[Dial M for Murder (1954)]], [[Donald Spoto]], [[Eva Marie Sain {{Journal articles}}
    4 KB (487 words) - 08:15, 23 February 2015
  • ..., which will last 13 weeks, with location scenes filmed at [[Covent Garden Market]]. Mid-afternoon, Hitchcock interviews actresses Patsy Byrne and [[Jean Mar ...ing shot (lasting 75 seconds) of Rusk leading Babs through [[Covent Garden Market]] and back to his flat. Nine takes are required before {{Hitchcock}} is sat
    16 KB (2,523 words) - 20:32, 23 April 2015
  • ...n]], [[Family Plot (1976)]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, London]], [[Jon Finch]], [[Kaleidoscope Frenzy]], [[Laurence Olivier]], [[ ...than otherwise, and sequences original to the film such as the running gag about Chief Inspector Oxford's wife's culinary ambitions clearly suited their sha
    8 KB (1,149 words) - 20:28, 21 July 2014
  • Fruit and vegetables have been sold in [[Covent Garden]] since the mid 1600s. During 1800s and early 1900s, a series of buildings By the 1970s, increased traffic congestion resulted in the market being moved to a new location in Nine Elms in {{Y1974}}.
    2 KB (274 words) - 12:01, 29 March 2015
  • ...reciation, [[Bates Motel]], Birds, [[Cahiers du Cinéma]], [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[David O. Selznick]], [[Donald Spoto]], [[Doris Day]], [[Eva Ma ...l]] and mansion produced for "[[Psycho]]" to his tongue-in-cheek monologue about "the birds and their age-long relationship with man" for "[[The Birds]]."
    11 KB (1,619 words) - 08:02, 22 August 2014
  • ...hcock]], American cinema, [[Barbara Bel Geddes]], British cinema, [[Covent Garden, London]], Crime films, Feature films, Film (International), Film (Producti ...into a simulacrum of the first. Part of what’s so fascinatingly perverse about the film is that Scottie has a beautiful and caring chum (Barbara Bel Gedde
    5 KB (838 words) - 08:13, 23 February 2015
  • ...[[Bel Air, Los Angeles, California]], [[Billie Whitelaw]], [[Covent Garden Market, London]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Frenzy (1972)]], [[Goodbye Piccadilly, He knows a lot, but not all, about audiences.
    8 KB (1,269 words) - 18:10, 15 April 2015