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Rebecca is an Academy Award winning 1940 psychological thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock as his first American project. An adaptation by Joan Harrison and Robert E. Sherwood of British author Daphne Du Maurier's 1938 novel Rebecca, it was produced by David O. Selznick.

Summary


Rebecca stars Laurence Olivier as Maxim de Winter, Joan Fontaine as his second wife, and Judith Anderson as his late wife's servant, Mrs. Danvers. The film is a gothic tale about the lingering memory of the title character, which still controls her husband, his new bride, and the housekeeper of their estate, Manderley, long after her death.

At Selznick's insistence, the plot of the novel Rebecca is largely unchanged in the film. Hitchcock was even able to sneak past the Hollywood Production Code the lesbianism of the housekeeper who is still obsessed with Rebecca, even after her death. It was one of the earliest, but far from the only, example of Hitchcock slipping veiled references to homosexuality into his films. Rope and Strangers on a Train are two notable examples of Hitchcock films that imply homosexual subtext without overtly dealing with the issue.

Trivia


  • Hitchcock had wanted to shoot Rebecca, but had been unable to afford the rights.
  • In order to maintain the dark atmosphere of the book, Hitchcock insisted that the film be shot in black and white.
  • Selznick looked unsuccessfully all over America (particularly New England) for a suitable location to portray Manderley. In the end he was forced to use a miniature instead.
  • As in the novel, the protagonist who narrates the tale is never identified by name. The original script named the heroine Daphne, after the writer of the novel, Daphne Du Maurier. Selznick objected and the name was dropped.
  • Ronald Colman turned down the part of Max de Winter.
  • More than 20 actresses were screen-tested for the role of Mrs. de Winter, among them Anne Baxter, Loretta Young, Margaret Sullavan and Vivien Leigh (who was involved with Sir Laurence Olivier at the time). Olivier pushed strongly for Leigh to get the role; as it was awarded to newcomer Joan Fontaine instead, he retaliated by treating Fontaine badly. Hitchcock used this to his advantage by telling Fontaine that everyone on the set hated her, in order to magnify the required shyness and unease of the role.
  • Hitchcock can be seen walking past a phone booth just after Jack Favell makes a call in the final part of the movie.
  • Rebecca was the only Hitchcock film to receive an Academy Award for Best Picture. This went to producer David O. Selznick.
  • Joan Fontaine was nominated in the Academy Award for Best Actress category. The prize however went to Ginger Rogers. Judith Anderson, who was nominated for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, also went home empty-handed, as did Laurence Olivier, who lost out to James Stewart.
  • In Spain, a rebeca refers to a variety of female knit jacket, after the one worn by the protagonist of the film.

Featured cast


Actor Role
Laurence Olivier George Fortescu Maximillian 'Maxim' de Winter
Joan Fontaine The Second Mrs. de Winter
George Sanders Jack Favell
Judith Anderson Mrs. Danvers
Nigel Bruce Major Giles Lacy
Reginald Denny Frank Crawley
C. Aubrey Smith Colonel Julyan
Gladys Cooper Beatrice Lacy
Florence Bates Mrs. Edythe Van Hopper
Melville Cooper Coroner
Leo G. Carroll Dr. Baker

Awards


Academy Awards won

Academy Award nominations

External links


1940 films | Drama films | Thriller films | Romance films | Mystery films | Films based on fiction books | Best Picture Academy Award winners | Films featuring a Best Actor Academy Award nominated performance | Films featuring a Best Actress Academy Award nominated performance | Films featuring a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award nominated performance | Films directed by Alfred Hitchcock | United Artists films

Rebecca (Film) | Rebeca (película) | Rebecca (Hitchcock) | Rebecca (film) | Rebecca, la prima moglie | A Manderley-ház asszonya | Rebecca (film) | レベッカ (映画) | Ребекка (фильм) | Mŕtva a živá | Rebekka

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Rebecca (film)".

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