Marnie - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Marnie"
Marnie (1964)
Timing: 2:10 (130 min)
Marnie - TMDB rating
7.155/10
1073
Marnie - Kinopoisk rating
7.479/10
11114
Marnie - IMDB rating
7.1/10
57000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

Costume Design

Photo Edith Head #71922

Edith Head

Edith Head
Costume Design

Stunts

May Boss
Stunts

Production Design

Robert F. Boyle
Production Design

Second Unit Director

Photo William Witney #299892

William Witney

William Witney
Second Unit Director

Set Decoration

George Milo
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Howard Smit
Makeup Artist
Robert Dawn
Makeup Artist
Jack Barron
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Photo Bernard Herrmann #2484

Bernard Herrmann

Bernard Herrmann
Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Photo Robert Burks #74412

Robert Burks

Robert Burks
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Leonard J. South
Camera Operator

Costumer

James Linn
Costumer
Rita Riggs
Costumer

Costume Supervisor

Vincent Dee

Vincent Dee
Costume Supervisor

Script Supervisor

Lois Thurman
Script Supervisor

Electrician

Paul Jacobsen
Electrician

Hairstylist

Virginia Darcy
Hairstylist

Still Photographer

Robert Willoughby
Still Photographer

Screenplay

Novel

Winston Graham
Novel

Assistant Director

James H. Brown
Assistant Director
Patricia Casey
Assistant Director

Hilton A. Green

Hilton A. Green
Assistant Director

Storyboard Artist

Harold Michelson
Storyboard Artist

First Assistant Camera

William N. Clark
First Assistant Camera

Other

Joan Joseff
Other

Colorist

Tanner Buschman
Colorist

Sound Recordist

William Russell
Sound Recordist
Waldon O. Watson
Sound Recordist

Unit Manager

Assistant Camera

Bobby Greene
Assistant Camera

What's left behind the scenes

  • During filming, a conflict arose between Hitchcock and Tippi Hedren, and he threatened to ruin her career. Shortly thereafter, the director gave the actress's five-year-old daughter, Melanie (future Melanie Griffith), an unforgettable gift – a doll depicting her mother lying in a small coffin. Despite this, Tippi Hedren calls "Marnie" her favorite film in her career.
  • Paramount executives suggested Lee Remick to Hitchcock for the lead role. Marnie could also have been played by Eva Marie Saint, Susan Hampshire, Vera Miles, and director Sydney Pollack's wife, Claire Griswold.
  • The director's cameo – at the fifth minute, Hitchcock emerges from a hotel room and watches Marnie Edgar (Tippi Hedren) and a servant with purchases walk away down the corridor, then turns his head towards the audience.
  • Diane Baker was not allowed to read the script until she agreed to participate. She only knew three things – the film was called 'Marnie', it was directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and Tippi Hedren played the lead role.
  • Alfred Hitchcock wanted Grace Kelly, by then already Princess of Monaco, to return to the big screen and play the lead role in this film. However, the residents of Monaco and the royal family were not enthusiastic about the idea of Kelly playing an unstable thief.
  • Screenwriter Jay Presson Allen made Mark's hobby zoology because it was her own interest, and also because Mark, based on his knowledge, psychoanalyzes Marnie in the film.
  • Dianne Baker recalled that during the filming of the episode where Baker's character overhears a conversation between Marnie and Mark, Hitchcock approached her, placed his hands on her face, and literally showed her the expression he wanted from her in that scene.
  • Joseph Stefano wrote his own version of the script, which was much closer to the original source material, and included two characters absent from Hitchcock's film: a psychotherapist to whom Mark takes the main character, and Terry, Marnie's colleague who is in love with her.
  • “Marnie” is the last film for which Bernard Herrmann composed the music (prior to this, he had collaborated with Hitchcock seven times).
  • Louise Latham, who played Marnie's mother, suggested Jay Preston Allen to Hitchcock. She and Louise were classmates at a boarding school in Texas.
  • Renowned biographer Donald Spoto, in his book about Hitchcock, “The Dark Side of Genius,” called “Marnie” Hitchcock’s last masterpiece.
  • Louise Latham plays Tippi Hedren's mother, although Latham is only 8 years older than Hedren.
  • In 2008, Vanity Fair magazine organized a photoshoot dedicated to the work of Hitchcock. Actress Naomi Watts portrayed Marnie in the shoot.
  • Initially, Evan Hunter adapted Winston Graham's novel. Hunter insisted on removing the episode in which Mark rapes Marnie from the script, as he considered it base and would cause Mark to lose respect in the audience's eyes. Hitchcock fired him and hired Jay Presson Allen, who decided that the character's behavior and Sean Connery's charisma would subsequently 'justify' Mark.
  • 'Marnie' is the last film for which Bernard Herrmann composed the music (prior to this, he collaborated with Hitchcock seven times).
  • “Marnie” was the last film for which Bernard Herrmann composed the music (prior to this, he had collaborated with Hitchcock seven times).
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