
When Shirley MacLaine (The Apartment) filled in as the replacement for the ill Carol Haney (Kiss Me Kate) during a theatrical production of The Pajama Game, the young stage actress came to the attention of Alfred Hitchcock. “When she came down on the set and read her lines, Hitch said to me, ‘I’m not going to tamper with this girl. She has such an odd quality and it’s delightful,’” recalled John Michael Hayes who unwittingly gave MacLaine one of the most memorable lines in the picture when upon being kissed by John Forsythe (Topaz), she warns him, “Lightly, Sam. I have a very short fuse.” Hayes was stunned by the crowd reaction. “It rocked the theatre and I looked up in total surprise. I had no idea. It was a fairly common expression. I didn’t mean it the way it came out. I meant that she was very emotional. I didn’t mean that she was climatic, but that’s the way the audience roared with it.” A famous British playwright is quoted by the character of Dr. Greenbow (Dwight Marfield). “It’s my favourite sonnet from Shakespeare. I had to put something in. I don’t think the audience understood what it was all about but it went with the theme. We had Shirley MacClaine and John Forsythe, and there were all sorts of things that prevented them from getting together. They met and got to know each other under the strangest of circumstances but they were destined to be a couple.” Unfortunately, moviegoers did not take to $1 million production which grossed $7 million and was described by Hitchcock as being “an expensive self-indulgence.” At the BAFTAs, The Trouble with Harry was nominated for Best Film and Best Foreign Actress (MacLaine), while Hitchcock contended for a Directors Guild of America Award.

“Hitch went off and the script wasn’t even finished,” recalled John Michael Hayes. “We only had maybe a third of it, and gaps in that too because he’d scheduled it before we were ready. They went to Marrakesh and I was sending pages by Pan American pilot to the set. Then I flew to London, wrote on the airplane in the lounge, then wrote all day, mimeographed at night, and brought the script to the set in the morning until we caught up.” Despite the time constraints, the screenwriter was able to infuse a sense of humour into the project. “There were two sets of dialogue, because Hitch wanted something lighter. Ben and Jo were in the marketplace and were going to face a bad situation, and Hitch didn’t want a scene with a family argument over her going back on the stage. It didn’t fit the mood, nor the walk they had to take, so they cabled me and asked for some other dialogue to fit the scene. I went home and I wrote all that stuff about how Ben’s patients had paid for their trip and their new clothes. ‘I’m wearing Mrs. So-and-So’s appendix.’ I sent it to them and remember John Mock saying, ‘Oh, this is so good!’ He got a cable back from Marrakesh saying how delighted they were with the dialogue.”

Controversy erupted between the filmmaker and the screenwriter over the contribution of Angus MacPhail. “Hitch had to have somebody to talk things over with and keep notes but it was left up to me to finally write it. Angus was a perfectly nice man. He was a friend of Hitchcock’s from the 1920s, and Hitch wanted to give him credit because he said, ‘He needs a credit. He needs the work.’” Hayes successfully pursued credit arbitration despite Hitchcock threatening never to speak to him again. “I was told that there were pages sent to the Guild that Hitch said Angus worked on. But if that was true, he never showed and mentioned them to me.” The victory came with a great cost as the two men never worked with each other again. “The collaboration got my writing noticed by the critics, the public, and the studios,” reflected Hayes. “It lifted me out of the ordinary journey of the screenwriter’s life, and there were a lot of good writers who never got the chance. I was lucky.”
For more on the collaborations between Alfred Hitchcock and John Michael Hayes, check out Steve DeRosa's book, Writing with Hitchcock.
Five Essential... Films of Alfred Hitchcock
Silent Master: The Early Films of Alfred Hitchcock
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
No comments:
Post a Comment