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  • ...o the [[Hitchcock Journal Articles Project]] and the [[Hitchcock Newspaper Articles Project]]. == Site Articles ==
    9 KB (1,104 words) - 20:22, 18 April 2015
  • '''Hitchcock to make film in London''' [[Alfred Hitchcock]] is to make his first film in England for 20 years (the last he made here being "[
    2 KB (275 words) - 21:22, 13 February 2014
  • ...his is a film like any other, made very much in transit from the last film to the next. ...io authorities. Not so Alfred Hitchcock. The studio set is strictly closed to visitors of any kind, and within an atmosphere of the utmost courtesy and f
    23 KB (4,055 words) - 07:20, 9 April 2014
  • ...ctor of his own and other people's plays. For nearly five years, from 1945 to 1950, he was Labour MP for the Eton and Slough Division of Buckinghamshire. ...artermaine in the cast, followed, if only for a short run, by a production from an American management in New York.
    5 KB (859 words) - 18:56, 30 April 2015
  • ...t. I've always said no. I'm not going to say no to you, but I don't - want to say yes just yet." Fair enough. End of conversation. ...as one who still got practically all his news about the state of the world from reading ''The Times'' each morning, and (ii) because I was sufficiently inf
    21 KB (3,807 words) - 20:47, 5 February 2014
  • ...first, he observes in a fruity growl, was ''[[Psycho]]'' "and that went on to become a sensation and the classic in its genre". ...y, the censor who has been censured by critics for his permissive attitude to ''Straw Dogs'' and who has passed Stanley Kubrick's ''A Clockwork Orange''
    2 KB (295 words) - 13:15, 17 January 2014
  • ...[[Alfred Hitchcock]] could on no account be persuaded to give his consent to the inclusion of ''[[Rope]]'', ''[[Rear Window]]'', ''[[The Man Who Knew To ...Hitchcock's 1927 adaptation of ''[[Easy Virtue]]'', for many years thought to be irretrievably lost.
    7 KB (1,227 words) - 13:28, 17 January 2014
  • '''Bergman in London to play Shaw's Ellen Terry role''' ...utionary tale about journalists not doing their homework. She is in London to play Lady Cicely Waynflete in ''Captain Brassbound's Conversion'', a part w
    5 KB (921 words) - 13:17, 17 January 2014
  • ...e film director, has been ordered to pay 150,000 francs (£12,500) damages to a French playwright for using ''[[Frenzy]]'' as the title of his latest fil [[Category: Articles about Frenzy (1972)]]
    765 B (105 words) - 13:17, 17 January 2014
  • {{newspaper articles}} [[Category: Articles from 1970 to 1979]]
    501 B (51 words) - 13:34, 2 January 2017
  • ...], Berlin State actress, wife and partner of of Marius Goring. Her wish is to be buried in England. [[Category: Articles about Lucie Mannheim]]
    490 B (61 words) - 17:28, 19 October 2012
  • ...ich the hallowed is a hoax and the mechanically sophisticated is dangerous to treat as a plaything. Hitchcock has never made a strategically wittier film ...e Rainbird fortune. Then Blanche, exhausted by her bogus insights, returns from the Other Side and gratefully accepts a drink. "A double shot of anything."
    9 KB (1,488 words) - 20:04, 3 April 2014
  • ''Like "Pie," his favorite horse, he was his own personality and still likes to be in front of the pack.'' ...ppealing to young audiences today, as evidenced by the tumultuous response to his Frank Capra films at a retrospective of the actor's work last year in L
    17 KB (2,897 words) - 21:20, 18 April 2015
  • ...ied aged 83, became so famous for his dazzling looks that it is impossible to think of him as other than a celebrity. ...cal activist and a philanthropist who distributed more money - in relation to his own wealth - than any other American during the 20th century.
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 09:19, 18 January 2014
  • ...twice-weekly newspaper column, beginning in the Daily Mirror in 1970, and from 1988 for the Daily Mail, until the paper announced his retirement last May. ...nger, preferring to "grow the tolerant, ironic eye", but when he was moved to rage, he could use words like artillery.
    10 KB (1,677 words) - 08:35, 18 January 2014
  • ...one facet of a man who was America's biggest philanthropist in proportion to his own wealth'' ...dazzling looks, and the bluest eyes in the business, that it is impossible to think of him as other than a celebrity.
    19 KB (3,151 words) - 08:58, 18 January 2014
  • * article: '''Cary Grant: The Man from Dream City''' ...Young]], [[Suspicion (1941)]], [[Sylvia Sidney]], [[Tallulah Bankhead]], [[To Catch a Thief (1955)]], [[Walter Slezak]]''
    90 KB (15,879 words) - 07:24, 23 February 2015
  • ...or, The exhibition, which is on display in the Museum's Auditorium Gallery from May 11 through September 26, focuses on several aspects of film design: 1) {{Journal articles}}
    4 KB (572 words) - 07:11, 15 April 2015
  • ...then to Sean Bourke's non-fiction book ''The Springing of George Blake'' (1970) in the early 1970s. ...London, in October 1966. After his escape, Blake fled to Finland and then to Russia.
    11 KB (1,796 words) - 12:07, 29 March 2015
  • '''Letters to the Editor''' '''Hitchcock's "Frenzy", from Mr Arthur La Bern'''
    2 KB (255 words) - 13:29, 17 January 2014

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