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<blockquote data-quote="moreluck" data-source="post: 911095" data-attributes="member: 1246"><p><span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'"><span style="color: black">Alfred Hitchcock made an appearance in every one of his movies from 1939 on. His first cameo came in 1926's The Lodger, where he showed up twice, in a news room and in a crowd scene... The cameos eventually became a gag, and after moving to Hollywood in 1939, Hitchcock made a point to pop up in his films in one way or another - sometimes in a photo, once as an outline in a neon sign, but most often in person. "I'm very careful to show up in the first five minutes so as to let the people look at the rest of the movie without further distraction," he explained. Alert viewers can spot him walking out of a pet shop with two dogs (his own) in The Birds, winding a clock in an apartment in Rear Window, missing a bus in North by Northwest, and in a newspaper ad for a weight-reducing product (in both before and after shots) in Lifeboat. </span></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="moreluck, post: 911095, member: 1246"] [FONT=Times New Roman][COLOR=black]Alfred Hitchcock made an appearance in every one of his movies from 1939 on. His first cameo came in 1926's The Lodger, where he showed up twice, in a news room and in a crowd scene... The cameos eventually became a gag, and after moving to Hollywood in 1939, Hitchcock made a point to pop up in his films in one way or another - sometimes in a photo, once as an outline in a neon sign, but most often in person. "I'm very careful to show up in the first five minutes so as to let the people look at the rest of the movie without further distraction," he explained. Alert viewers can spot him walking out of a pet shop with two dogs (his own) in The Birds, winding a clock in an apartment in Rear Window, missing a bus in North by Northwest, and in a newspaper ad for a weight-reducing product (in both before and after shots) in Lifeboat. [/COLOR][/FONT] [/QUOTE]
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