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Partners in Suspense: Critical Essays on Bernard Herrmann and Alfred Hitchcock PDF

238 Pages·2016·4.51 MB·English
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i Partners in suspense ii iii Partners in suspense Critical essays on Bernard Herrmann and Alfred Hitchcock Edited by STEVEN RAWLE and K. J. DONNELLY Manchester University Press iv Copyright © Manchester University Press 2017 While copyright in the volume as a whole is vested in Manchester University Press, copyright in individual chapters belongs to their respective authors, and no chapter may be reproduced wholly or in part without the express permission in writing of both author and publisher. Published by Manchester University Press Altrincham Street, Manchester M1 7JA www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk British Library Cataloguing- in- Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data applied for ISBN 978 0 7190 9586 3 hardback First published 2017 The publisher has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for any external or third- party internet websites referred to in this book, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. Typeset by Out of House Publishing v Contents List of figures and tables page vii List of contributors x Acknowledgements xiii Introduction K. J. Donnelly and Steven Rawle 1 1 Bernard Herrmann: Hitchcock’s secret sharer Jack Sullivan 10 2 Hitchcock, music and the mathematics of editing Charles Barr 24 3 The anatomy of aural suspense in Rope and Vertigo Kevin Clifton 37 4 The therapeutic power of music in Hitchcock’s films Sidney Gottlieb 50 5 A Lacanian take on Herrmann/ Hitchcock Royal S. Brown 62 6 Portentous arrangements: Bernard Herrmann and The Man Who Knew Too Much Murray Pomerance 75 7 On the road with Hitchcock and Herrmann: sound, music and the car journey in Vertigo (1958) and Psycho (1960) Pasquale Iannone 89 8 A dance to the music of Herrmann: a figurative dance suite David Cooper 100 9 The sound of The Birds Richard Allen 113 10 Musical romanticism v. the sexual aberrations of the criminal female: Marnie (1964) K. J. Donnelly 135 11 The murder of Gromek: theme and variations Tomas Williams 150 12 Mending the Torn Curtain: a rejected score’s place in a discography Gergely Hubai 165 13 The Herrmann– Hitchcock murder mysteries: post- mortem William H. Rosar 174 vi vi Contents 14 How could you possibly be a Hitchcocko- Herrmannian?: Digitally re- narrativising collaborative authorship Steven Rawle 197 Selected bibliography 211 Index 218 vii Figures and tables Figures 2.1 The Unchanging Sea (1910, Dir: D.W. Griffith). (L to R) A (shot 1): the home; B (6): farewell; A (13) fatherless baby (Biograph Company/ American Mutoscope & Biograph) page 26 2.2 The Pleasure Garden (1925, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). (L to R) Shore: the wife; Boat: the husband (Bavaria Film/ Gainsborough Pictures/ Münchner Lichtspielkunst AG) 30 2.3 The Skin Game (1931, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). (L to R) Shot 1: Auctioneer; shot 2: Hornblower; shot 3: Hillcrist (British International Pictures) 31 2.4 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Cross- cutting between Melanie and the growing fire (Universal Pictures) 32 2.5 Family Plot (1976, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). (L to R) shot A; shot B; shot C (Universal Pictures) 34 3.1 Colouristic chord successions and bass drone in the first section of Rope’s movie trailer (Chester Music) 39 3.2 Textural strands in Poulenc’s Mouvement Perpétuel (bars 1– 2) (Chester Music) 41 3.3 Herrmann’s Prelude from Vertigo (bars 1– 8) (Sony/ ATV Music Publishing/ Famous Music LLC) 44 3.4 Herrmann’s Prelude from Vertigo (bars 89– 101): Love Theme (Sony/ ATV Music Publishing/ Famous Music LLC) 46 3.5 Herrmann’s Prelude from Vertigo (bars 101– 6) (Sony/ ATV Music Publishing/ Famous Music LLC) 47 5.1 Herrmann’s Rosebud motif from Citizen Kane (Music Sales Group) 67 5.2 Herrmann’s ‘flirtation’ with ‘Jeepers Creepers’ (author’s notation) 70 5.3 Annotation for the ‘Hitchcock chord’ (author’s notation) 70 viii viii Figures and tables 6.1 The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The score for the cantata, descending violin sixteenth- note passages racing ahead (Paramount Pictures/ Filwite Productions) 79 6.2 The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Herrmann conducts the LSO in the film (Paramount Pictures/ Filwite Productions) 82 7.1 Vertigo (1958, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Scottie begins his pursuit of Madeleine (Alfred J. Hitchcock Productions/ Universal Pictures) 95 7.2 Psycho (1960, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Marion Crane drives away from the policeman (Shamley Productions/ Universal Pictures) 97 8.1 The first phrase of the Prelude to Act One of Richard Wagner’s opera Tristan und Isolde (public domain) 108 8.2 The chord sequence from the cue ‘Sleep’ from Bernard Herrmann’s score for Vertigo (Sony/ ATV Music Publishing/ Famous Music LLC) 109 9.1 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack the schoolchildren (sound graph created by David Barratt) 121 9.2 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack the schoolchildren (sound graph created by David Barratt) 121 9.3 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack Melanie in the phone booth (sound graph created by David Barratt) 124 9.4 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack Melanie in the phone booth (sound graph created by David Barratt) 124 9.5 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack the Brenner homestead (sound graph created by David Barratt) 126 9.6 The Birds (1963, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). The birds attack the Brenner homestead (sound graph created by David Barratt) 126 11.1 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Hitchcock shows Gromek’s final moments of life in an unrelenting shot lasting 40 seconds (Universal Pictures) 156 11.2 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Herrmann’s initial ‘Killing’ motif (Themes and Variations) 157 11.3 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Herrmann’s use of triplets and the rising pitch, matching the scene’s tension (Themes and Variations) 157 11.4 Herrmann’s earlier use of this style of motif in Vertigo (Famous Chappell Ltd) 158 11.5 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Both composers choose to emphasise the explosion of violence on screen as the farmer’s wife (Carolyn Conwell) stabs Gromek (Universal Pictures) 158 11.6 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Herrmann’s ‘silenced’ semibreve (Themes and Variations) 159 ix Figures and tables ix 11.7 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Addison’s score, imitative of the action on screen (Shamley Music Corp.) 160 11.8 Torn Curtain (1966, Dir: Alfred Hitchcock). Addison’s score mirrors Gromek’s fall (Shamley Music Corp.) 160 Tables 2.1a Distribution of set- ups across a scene in The Unchanging Sea (Griffith, 1910) 27 2.1b Distribution of shots across a sequence in The Unchanging Sea (Griffith, 1910) 29 2.2 Distribution of shots across a sequence in The Pleasure Garden (Hitchcock, 1925) 30 2.3 Distribution of shots across a sequence in The Skin Game (Hitchcock, 1931) 32 2.4 ‘Musical’ plot of a sequence’s shots in Family Plot (Hitchcock, 1976) 35

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For a decade from 1955, Alfred Hitchcock worked almost exclusively with one composer: Bernard Herrmann. FromThe Trouble with Harryto the bitter spat surroundingTorn Curtain, the partnership gave us some of cinema's most memorable musical moments, taught us to stay out of the shower, away from height
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