Following a six-year stint in the sales and advertising departments of a telegraph company, the 21-year-old Hitchcock made the jump to the movie business in 1921. He got his first chance to direct a full-length film with 1925âs âThe Pleasure Garden,â and then followed up his debut with âThe Mountain Eagle,â a silent melodrama set in Kentucky. All the prints of the âThe Mountain Eagleâ have since disappeared, and today all that remains of the film is a handful of production photos and a lobby card that was found at a flea market. Hitchcock was reportedly happy that the film was lostâhe once called it âa very bad movieââbut it now stands at the top of the British Film Instituteâs âMost Wantedâ list of lost films.
Hitchcock and Alma Reville (Credit: RDA/Getty Images)
2. His wife was his closest collaborator.Â
Hitchcock worked with many of the top talents in Hollywood, but his most trusted advisor was almost certainly his wife, Alma Reville. The two married in 1926 after working together at the London brach of a production company called Famous Players-Lasky. Reville later served as a writer, script supervisor, editor and assistant director on dozens of Hitchcockâs early films, and he came to value her opinion above all others. As a young director, he was even known to look over to Reville after each take and ask, âWas it all right?â before moving on to the next shot. Reville moved further behind the scenes as Hitchcockâs career progressed, but she continued to consult on key script, casting and editing decisions well into the 1960s. Among other contributions, she was responsible for persuading Hitchcock to consider using composer Bernard Herrmannâs now-famous string score for the shower murder scene in the film âPsycho.â
3. He was a notorious practical joker.
Hitchcock had a penchant for pulling absurd and often cruel pranks on his movie sets and in his private life. He delighted in placing whoopee cushions under his coworkersâ chairs, and once held a dinner party where all the courses had been inexplicable dyed blue with food coloring. For one of his most elaborate stunts, Hitchcock bet one of his crew that the man couldnât spend a whole night locked in handcuffs. The crewman accepted, only to later find that the director had secretly dosed him with a laxative before slapping on the cuffs. In some cases, Hitchcock even used his pranks as part of the creative process. During the filming of âThe 39 Steps,â he handcuffed the two leads together for a scene and then pretended to have lost the key. The actors were chained to each other for a good while before Hitchcock suddenly âfoundâ the key in a coat pocket and explained that the ordeal had been a ruse to help them build chemistry.
Hitchcock's "cameo" in a newspaper ad in the film "Lifeboat"
4. He made cameos in most of his films.
Part of Hitchcockâs fame was due to the self-referential and often humorous appearances he made in 39 of his movies. The director usually appeared in the background as a pedestrian or a public transportation passenger, and his walk-on parts eventually became so beloved that he had to place them early in the film to avoid distracting his audience. One of the most creative cameos came in the 1944 film âLifeboat,â which takes place entirely on a raft adrift at sea. The portly Hitchcock can be seen in the âbeforeâ and âafterâ photos in a newspaper ad for a weight loss product called âReduco Obesity Slayer.â
5. He made a documentary about Nazi concentration camps.Â
Like many Hollywood directors, Hitchcock chipped in during World War II by making propaganda films for the Allies. He famously shot two short films for the British Ministry of Information about French resistance fighters, and in the summer of 1945, he helped assemble concentration camp footage for an ambitious documentary called âMemory of the Camps.â Hitchcock collaborated with writers who had seen the atrocities first hand, and sent instructions to cameramen on how to properly film the horror of the death camps. The film was originally intended for a German audience, but it was shelved after the British government decided it would be a blow to the nationâs already crippled morale. âMemory of the Campsâ remained unreleased until the 1980s, when it was shown at film festivals and on public television.
Hitchcock and Salvador Dali (Credit: PhotoQuest/Getty Images)
6. He worked with famous painters and literary figures.
Hitchcock teamed with legendary Hollywood actors like Cary Grant, Ingrid Bergman and Jimmy Stewart, but he also enlisted the help of talents from outside the film world. The director hired the likes of Dorothy Parker, Raymond Chandler, Thornton Wilder and John Steinbeck to punch up his scripts, and tried to get both Ernest Hemingway and Vladimir Nabokov to write for him. For 1945âs Spellbound, Hitchcock even brought in surrealist artist Salvador Dali to help concoct the filmâs complex dream sequences.