Few midcentury cultural figures would at first seem to have as little in common as Andy Warhol and Alfred Hitchcock. Sure, they both made films, but how straight a line can even the farthest-reaching cinema theorists draw between, say, Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960) and Warhol’s Vinyl (1965)? Hitchcock’s The Birds (1963) and Warhol’s Empire (1964)? Yet not only did both of them direct many motion pictures, each began as a visual artist: “Warhol had started his career working as a commercial illustrator, Hitchcock had started out creating illustrations for title cards in silent movies,” says Filmmaker IQ’s post on their encounter in the September 1974 issue of Warhol’s Interview magazine. Yet in the brief conversation printed, they discuss not drawing, and not filmmaking, but murder:
Andy Warhol: Since you know all these cases, did you ever figure out why people really murder? Itâs always bothered me. Why.
Alfred Hitchcock: Well Iâll tell you. Years ago, it was economic, really. Especially in England. First of all, divorce was very hard to get, and it cost a lot of money.
[ ⦠]
Andy Warhol: But what about a mass murderer.
Alfred Hitchcock: Well, they are psychotics, you see. Theyâre absolutely psychotic. Theyâre very often impotent. As I showed in âFrenzy.â The man was completely impotent until he murdered and thatâs how he got his kicks. But today of course, with the Age of the Revolver, as one might call it, I think there is more use of guns in the home than there is in the streets. You know? And men lose their heads?
Andy Warhol: Well I was shot by a gun, and it just seems like a movie. I canât see it as being anything real. The whole thing is still like a movie to me. It happened to me, but itâs like watching TV. If youâre watching TV, itâs the same thing as having it done to yourself.
“Warhol openly proclaimed that he was nervous upon meeting the legendary director,” adds Filmmaker IQ, “and posed with Hitchcock by kneeling at his feet,” resulting in the photo you see at the top of the post. They also include three portraits Warhol made of Hitchcock, the best known of which Christie’s Auction House describes as “a variation on the doubled self-image that Hitchcock played with in his title sequence, layering his own expressive line-drawing over the directorâs silhouette, suggesting the mischievous defacement of graffiti as much as the canonization of a hero through the timelessness of the inscribed profile.” These images and the brief interview excerpt leave us wondering: can one call a work â on film, in a frame, in a magazine â both Hitchcockian and Warholian? A question, perhaps, best left to the theorists.
Related Content:
Watch Andy Warholâs 1965 Film, Vinyl, Adapted from Anthony Burgessâ A Clockwork Orange
Three âAnti-Filmsâ by Andy Warhol: Sleep, Eat & Kiss
Listen to François Truffautâs Big, 12-Hour Interview with Alfred Hitchcock (1962)
36 Hitchcock Murder Scenes Climaxing in Unison
Alfred Hitchcockâs 50 Ways to Kill a Character (and Our Favorite Hitch Resources on the Web)
Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on cities, language, Asia, and menâs style. Heâs at work on a book about Los Angeles, A Los Angeles Primer. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Facebook.
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Andy Warhol Interviews Alfred Hitchcock (1974)
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