Friday, September 6,1974' rHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, September E, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage Five Hitch, master of orror, now 75 - By MARY CAMPBELL AP-News Feature Writer NEW YORK (P) - Alfred Hitchcock, just turned 75, has1 directed 55 movies since 19221 and, without thought of retire- ment, has a contract to make1 three more. "Tell your story. Tell it with1 great potency. Tell it visually,. -Be as simple as you can. That. is my summation of film mak-1 ing," the master' said in his us- ual mock sepulchral voice. "My approach is, 'What do. they think of this movie on the, Ginza?' Therefore, I tell it as visually as I can, so a Japan-. ese audience looking at t h e screen understands what the' situation is and isn't relyingj upon that double-exposed title at the bottom. Otherwise they are going to spend the eve-, ning reading, not going to see a' picture. "And what about an English-1 speaking woman? She dropsI something and in reaching; down for it, doesn't hear an im- money," he said. Madam and Hitch, as they call each other in gentle and polite tones, live in Bel Air, Calif., in a one-story house without home swimming pool or home screening room. In fact, Hitchcock says he doesn't at- tend movies at all any more, having come to his own work- able conclusions about them through the years. Hitchcock is considered the master of suspense and wry humor in film. His subject is usually murder. "Ideal with murder as fic- tion. I don't even believe in hat- red. I think it's wasted energy. I don't dislike anyone; I feel it doesn't do any good. Revenge I think is a dreadful, dreadful thing." In the way he plans a film now, Hitchcock plotted care- fully his entry to the movie business. He was working in the advertising department of an engineering firm in Britain when he started job seeking. "My approach is, 'What do they think of this movie on the Ginza?' Therefore, I tell it as visually as I can, so a Japanese aud- ience looking at the screen understands what the situation is and isn't relying upon that double-exposed title at the bottom." -Alfred Hitchcock w.""x" ?:". ::." .1{4. i: r 53 :{"f{? ":"}'3:{i :."{s::"""1.:" { i :":?}:k{?:"':"R:,y:": ' ."6":4:{ v:""5'}:i:7. i":"::db:::" AP Photo ALFRED HITCHCOCK, recently marking his 75th birthday, examines a script in his elegantly furnished office at Universal Studios. portant line of dialogue. If it's beinng told visually, it will take longer, and she won't miss all of it. "The essential thing is to make the audience participate. My films are designed to create emotion in the audience; it's what makes suspense." It may take three or four years to make the three n e w films but the director says it's no good rushing into a picture. "Madam and I live modestly enough so we don't have to be terribly desperate to make a picture for the sake of making "I think when a young man wants a job it is very vital that he show a sample of his work. I found out through the trade papers that Paramount was go- ing to open a studio in London, and the name of their first film. "I sketched out the title and got a commercial artist to exe- cute it in the best professional manner. I took it to the studio and told them I'd like to do the title for their film and showed it to'them. The man in charge said they hadn't organized the studio yet." , Hitchcock wanted to do notr ss Records in review Do you love schlagers, like I love schlagers?' Lori Lieberman belts them out like a pro on her new album,I A Piece of Time (Capitol ST-11297). Her music is lavish and soothing-confectionary rock. She's smarter than Petula Clark, and she's got more nerve, but otherwise they're sisters in tle faith. The powers behind Lieberman's throne are Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel (authors of Jim Croce's I Got a Name), who produced and wrote all the songs here. And they did the job right, making good use of Lieberman's versatile and likeable voice. This album is downright pretty. A Piece of Time 'would be wonderful but for one annoying feature: Gimbel and Fox wrote lyrics which are often smothering in their righteousness-just too goddamn Puritanical for many tastes. Still, this album is a must for softies everywhere. -Tom' Olson only the main title but the sub- titles of the silent film.! "I went along again when I heard theyahad changed t h e, first film, with the new title designed and executed, and Ii got the job. I was 20," Hitch- cock recalled. Titles in silent film were of three kinds - spoken, character! and narrative. The director re- calls putting an illustration un- derneath the words. "If you said, 'By this time, George was leading a fast life,' you'd draw a candle with a flame at both ends. I had to! figure out the idea. Some of the titles were awful," he recalled. I The movie studio closed down and Hitchcock was out of a job. He found work building' movie sets for a rental moviel company,"and in his spare time wrote his own script from a novella. "Then they said they'd! bought the play, 'Woman to Wo- man,' and did I know anyone who could write the script. I said I'd show them a sample of my work. I got the job, onlyI by showing what I could do.' Not promises. Facts." In this way, Hitchcock be- came a movie art director, gen- eral production manager, assist- ant director and director. And he married an editor Alma Re- ville. At home in California, Hitch- cock and his wife prepare their dinner - Prince Rainier and Princess Grace have eaten at the Hitchcock kitchen table - and once a week they eat out as a change for Madam." i They retire early, but it is' Hitchcock who prepares the tea: tray with electric teapot at the: ready for wheeling into the bed-: room. And it is he who presents Ms. Hitchcock her cup of hot tea first thing in the morning. Hitchcock, whose birthday was Aug. 13, goes to his doctor every Tuesday and every month has blood tests. "I'm not scared of anything. I just want to know what is go- ing on. I've been doing it for the last seven or ten years. In 1943, I weighed just under 300 pounds. My ankles hung over my socks. My back ached. So I took off 97 pounds. "My present weight is 228. If I can get to 215 or 200, I'll be just the weight for my frame. It's horribly embarras- sing to talk about oneself, butI I know you should have y o u r story," he added. Hitchcock first came to the United States in 1940. His con- tract has always given him complete artistic control over his films. "This is an embar- rassing clause because I am not a belligerent person." He re- members exercising the clause only once. Although he prepares his films with great care, Hitch- cock considers film making not an art but an industry. "I have a responsibility to cause only myself to starve if the people employed where I'm my painting doesn't sell. Does working, of which I'm v e r y , a director have a right to say, very conscious. Five thousand 'I'm going to make this film people are employed on the Uni- only to please myself?' I don't versal lot. If the studio does think he does. Because he has not make successful pictures, a decided to involve himself in lot of people are going to be what is called - this is an im- out of work. portant word - the film indus- "I'm not an artist who may try." Michigan Daily rt MEDIACTRICS Nat. Sci. Auditorium SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE* Friday and Saturday 7:30 & 9:30 Admission: $1.00 p d |I 20% STUDENT DISCOUNT I Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. Bowling Leagues Forming SIGN UP UNION LANES OPEN: I1 a.m.-12 mid. Mon.-Thurs. 1 1 a.m.-I a.m. Fri. & Sat. 1 p.m.-12 mid. Sundays KATHERINE HEPBURN WEEKEND 1952 PAT AND MIKE The acting team of Hepburn and Spencer Tracy tackle this comedy about a talented lady athlete and her hard-boiled manager. "It's the most pleasant of the Hepburn-Tracy comedies."-Pauline Kael. SHORT: Tamer of Wild Horses. Zagreb animation. KATHERINE HEPBURN WEEKEND SAT.: HUSTON'S THE AFRICAN QUEEN SUN.: CUKOR'S QUALITY STREET TONIGHT AT ARCHITECTURE cine a gudid 7:0 &' :00AUDITORIUM I cinema guild :O O $ r * 4, les 0161 .te +r. .r . r# f CINEMA II welcomes new and old students 4.f American and Foreign Films r4, ~.r .... Aln-1 J .. A. -n il L.-M