[In March 2003, several readers
of the 'MacGuffin' website responded to an invitation to send messages
to Kim Novak. The messages, paying particular tribute to Ms Novak's
memorable performance in Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958), were duly forwarded.
In gratitude for them, Ms Novak recently gave the following exclusive interview
to author Stephen Rebello, a personal friend of Ms Novak's. She and
Stephen talked one evening in the lounge of the Regent Beverly Wilshire
Hotel (where, notes Stephen, Warren Beatty lived for years and where Julia
Roberts played now-famous scenes in Pretty Woman [1990]).
The editor of 'The MacGuffin' takes this opportunity to express his appreciation
both to Ms Novak and Mr Rebello and to the message-writers. The original
messages are appended after the interview.]
SR: So, what was it like for you
reading the letters of people from the 'MacGuffin' website who wrote so
appreciatively of your work?
KN: I am so deeply moved.
There was so much insight, appreciation, and intelligence in every one
of them. They arrived at the perfect moment, too. What I always
try to do in my acting is to communicate with people, to touch them, so
I am especially gratified by everyone’s interest in Vertigo.
SR: When the script for Vertigo
came to you, you were under contract to Columbia and its president, the
legendarily crass Harry Cohn. You were also the number one box-office
attraction at the time.
KN: That’s right.
SR: How did doing Vertigo
come about for you?
KN: Harry Cohn told me, ‘I
got this awful script that Alfred Hitchcock wants you to do. If it
weren’t for Hitchcock, I’d never let you do it.’
SR: How did you respond to the screenplay?
KN: The script was always the most
important thing to me and I loved the script. For one thing, I’ve
always admired trees. I just worship them. Think what trees
have witnessed, what history, such as living through the Civil War, yet
they still survive. I’ve always felt that part of why they survive
is because they don’t try to intercede, to advise ‘No, that’s the wrong
way,’ or to try and wipe out an army. They stood and observed. When
I read that part of the Hitchcock script where Madeleine and Scottie are
among the redwoods, she touches the tree rings and says, “Here I was born
and here I died. It was only a moment. You took no notice,’
I got goose-bumps. When it came to shoot that scene, I had goose-bumps.
Just touching that old tree was truly moving to me because when you touch
these trees, you have such a sense of the passage of time, of history.
It’s like you’re touching the essence, the very substance of life.
I remember taking my father to see the redwood forest once. He wept
and so did I. He ‘got’ it in the same way as I do. We never
talked about it. That scene in Vertigo I felt more than any
other, except the one in which Judy says to Jimmy’s character that if she
lets him change her, will he love her? And she says she’ll do it,
she doesn’t care any more about herself. That scene was so important
to me. I was so naked there, so willing to be anything he wanted,
just to be loved.
SR: Did Hitchcock make you feel valued
as a performer and collaborator?
KN: He didn’t necessarily, but,
on the other hand, he didn’t make me feel ’less than.’ He never said,
‘Do it a different way,’ or ‘You’re not doing it right.’ We only
did probably two, three takes on every scene we did, at the most.
I knew that he was a person who wanted what he wanted. I grew
up in a family that never expressed when I did something right, but you
knew when you did something wrong. So, I understood. What I
would do after a take is to look in Jimmy Stewart’s eyes. He would
nod his head, as if to say, ‘That was it.’ I used Jimmy to give me
what I needed to keep going and to know that I was on the right path with
it. I thought I saw Jimmy’s soul all the time we worked. He never
covered his soul and I never covered mine. We saw into each other’s
souls, very definitely. So, Hitchcock wouldn’t say anything
about my work in the movie but, on the other hand, he wouldn’t complain,
either.
SR: Vertigo is, thematically,
about so many things, including obsession. From your viewpoint, what
did Hitchcock seem obsessed by?
KN: Technical points were his main
thing. He’d always look through the lens to watch your performance,
unlike directors who sit off to the side. You’d never have a sense looking
at his face how he thought it was going. He was the camera and I
always felt comfortable with the camera. It was always difficult
to have a director off to the side. Why I loved working with Hitchcock
was that he allowed me that creativity and input. I always painted
when I’d go home from a day on the sets of my movies. I love to paint
but, back then, I was largely painting out of frustration. I don’t
think I painted at all while I worked on Vertigo. I didn’t
have the need to. I was so into doing what I was doing and I felt
good about what I was doing. No one was telling me, ‘Do it this way.’
Hitchcock wouldn’t tell me how to think. Bad directors love to tell
you how to think. I mean, why do they hire you? Today, they
could just computerize you.
SR: Costume designer Edith Head was
quoted as saying that you arrived on the set with all sorts of preconceived
notions about what you would and wouldn’t wear.
KN: I was always opinionated.
Once we were making Vertigo, Hitchcock never questioned anything
about what I was doing character-wise. Before shooting started, he
sent me over to Edith Head, who showed me a set of drawings. When
I saw them, the very first thing I said was, ‘I’m sorry. I don’t
wear black shoes.’ When she said, ‘Alfred Hitchcock wants you to
wear these shoes,’ I said, ‘I’m sure he doesn’t mind.’ I didn’t think
it would matter to him what kind of shoes I wore. I had never had
a director who was particular about the costumes, the way they were designed,
the specific colors. The two things he wanted the most were those
shoes and that gray suit. When Edith Head showed me that gray suit,
I said, “Oh, my god, that looks like it would be very hard to act in.
It’s very confining.’ Then, when we had the first fitting of the
dress, it was even worse and I said, ‘This is so restrictive.’
She said, ‘Well, maybe you’d better talk to Alfred Hitchcock about this.’
SR: How did that conversation go?
KN: I went in and he said, ‘I understand
you don’t like these black shoes.’ He asked me why and I said, ‘I
tell you, black shoes always sort of make me feel I’m pulled down.
I’ve always felt that your feet should be the same as the top of your head,
so that you’re connected. Wearing the black shoes would make me feel
as if I were disconnected.’ He heard me out. And then he said,
‘Fine. When you play the role of Judy, you will not have to wear
black shoes. When you are playing Madeleine, you will wear them.’
When he put it like that -- after all, he’s the director – I said,
‘OK.’
SR: How did being opinionated lead
to any other disagreements between you and Hitchcock?
KN: I really wanted the chance to
express myself and he allowed me that chance. It felt OK because
he had heard me out. He felt my reasons weren’t good enough, they
weren’t right. I just wanted to be heard as far as what I felt. So,
I thought, ‘I’ll live with the grey suit.’ I also thought, ‘I’m going
to use this. I can make this work for me. Because it bothers
me, I’ll use it and it can help me feel like I’m having to be Madeleine,
that I’m being forced to be her. I’ll have it as my energy to play
against.’ It worked. That suit and those shoes were a blessing.
I was constantly reminded that I was not being myself, which made it right
for Madeleine. When I went out of Alfred Hitchcock’s office, I remember
his wonderful smile when he said, ‘I’m so glad we had this talk.’
I think he saw that this was going to be good. He didn’t say to me,
‘Now use that,’ he allowed me to arrive at that myself.
SR: Was it your idea not to wear
a bra when you played Judy.
KN: That’s right, when I played
Judy, I never wore a bra. It killed me having to wear a bra as Madeleine
but you had to because they had built the suit so that you had to stand
very erect or you suddenly were not ‘in position.’ They made that
suit very stiff. You constantly had to hold your shoulders
back and stand erect. But, oh that was so perfect. That suit
helped me find the tools for playing the role. It was wonderful for
Judy because then I got to be without a bra and felt so good again.
I just felt natural. I had on my own beige shoes and that felt good.
Hitchcock said, ‘Does that feel better?’ I said, ‘Oh, yes, thank
you so much.’ But then, I had to play ‘Madeleine’ again when Judy
had to be made over again by Scottie into what she didn’t want to be.
I could use that, again, totally for me, not just being made over into
Madeleine but into Madeleine who wore that ghastly gray suit. The
clothes alone were so perfect, they were everything I could want as an
actress.
SR: The short haircut you usually
wore in your films was copied by women all around the world. Why
did Hitchcock make you wear wigs in Vertigo?
KN: That’s right, my hair was short
at that time in my career and Hitchcock wanted that perfect pulled-back
hair. I already hated that gray suit and then having to go through
putting on that wig with a false front -- again made me feel so trapped
inside this person who was desperately wanting to break out of it but she
was so caught up in the web of deception that she couldn’t. The fear
of not being loved if she didn’t have on these clothes or wore her hair
in a certain way -- oh, god, she had nothing left but to kill herself in
the bell tower.
SR: So you definitely understood
Judy as hurling herself from the tower.
KN: Absolutely. She was trapped.
SR: The dubbing notes for Vertigo
indicate that Hitchcock had you record the voice of the nun in the belltower.
KN: Not so. I never did that.
SR: You never recorded the nun’s
voice.
KN: (laughing) I would know
if I had. Dubbing notes, notes from the set – they’re very imprecise.
I tell you, I would have remembered that because I would have thought it
was a fascinating idea – as if Judy’s guilt were haunting her so much that
she imagined the nun speaking. That’s a wonderful idea. Do
you suppose they’d let me dub it today because it would be so interesting
to hear the scene done that way?
SR: We’d need to talk with the Hitchcock
family, Universal, Mssrs. Katz and Harris.
KN: Hmmmm. Now, you’ve got
me thinking.
SR: How did you react to the mixed-to-negative
notices and the disappointing box-office for Vertigo?
KN: It lessened my self-confidence.
I always have this feeling that I’m supposed to do something, to mean something.
My sense of that started to weaken, as if, ‘Oh, I thought this was a medium
that I was supposed to touch people in and I’m not having an impact.’
As time went by, I thought, ‘This is not the right medium.’ It’s
a wonderful medium and I enjoyed working in it but I started to think that
this must have been a detour. This must not be my medium for doing
something important and to touch people. I loved acting, which was
never about money, the fame. It was about a search for meaning.
It was painful.
SR: Even under contract, with such
films as Middle of The Night (1959), Jeanne Eagels (1957),
and, especially, Vertigo you seemed determined to wriggle out of
the straitjacket of the ‘new Marilyn Monroe’ and the ‘lavender blonde’
publicity gambits Columbia foisted on you.
KN: Oh, yes. I tried so hard
with movies like Vertigo and Middle of the Night and others.
I felt those would show me that it’s only a matter of time before I’d find
the right one to reach out and touch people. Harry Cohn said after
Vertigo,
‘Now, let’s get back and do some scripts we can make money with.’
My security comes from my senses, my sensing the direction I should go
and suddenly I felt out of tune, out of step with what other people wanted
or what other people expected of me. The work I did in Vertigo meant
nothing if no one cared about the movie. Luckily,
Vertigo
had a revival and people had begun to recognize there was something special
and it gained in reputation. But it just as well could have ended
up rotting in film cans somewhere. It means nothing if the movie
doesn’t get out there.
SR: While filming Bell, Book and
Candle (1958) with James Stewart, did you feel any emotional carry-over
from Vertigo or did you even talk about that movie at all?
KN: It seems to me that when
Jimmy and I were making that movie, Vertigo hadn’t been released
yet. I don’t remember talking with Jimmy about Vertigo.
We were just on to the next movie. We had such a wonderful time making
Bell,
Book and Candle and just got closer as people. We had a wonderful
friendship. The director would yell ‘Cut,’ the scene would be over,
they’d throw on the lights and we’d still be sitting there. We wouldn’t
even say anything to each other. We’d just be there with our feet
resting on an end table and communicating silently, comfortable in each
other’s presence without feeling we were in the midst of Hollywood.
I always felt Jimmy was trapped in Hollywood. He felt it himself.
He loved aviation so much and he wanted to be able to do more of that.
He somehow just got stuck here. I’ve never met two people who were
less ‘Hollywood’ than Jimmy Stewart and Fred Astaire, with whom I made
The
Notorious Landlady (1962). They didn’t belong here but their
lives were here. They couldn’t break away from it, for some reason.
I just had to break away.
SR: Harry Cohn was very much a businessman
and Vertigo did not make money. Did he explain his course
of action for you after Vertigo.
KN: His idea was for me to play
in beach party kinds of roles and do Lana Turner kinds of movies.
As I said, I began losing confidence in my instincts, which is tough and
very bad for an instinctive person. I didn’t want to start relying on what
someone else thought was right. It was easier to go away all together.
SR: Well, many of us would like to
see you back for as long as you’d like to be. I know in the past
few months you’ve gotten a number of offers to do some major films and
to appear on high profile television shows. Are you tempted?
KN: (laughing) Well, we’ll see.
© 2004, by Kim Novak and Stephen Rebello
Readers' messages sent to Ms Novak
[Editor's note. The initial tribute to Ms Novak was emailed to me by Australian director Richard Franklin and provided the impetus for inviting our readers to have their say ...]
1. From Richard Franklin, Melbourne, Australia.
When I was directing PSYCHO II, I
discussed VERTIGO with Vera Miles. She told me Hitch was furious that she
had become
pregnant on the eve of his making
her a star. But in this instance Hitch was wrong about the casting of his
greatest picture.
I have seen material of Vera in the
Madeleine/Judy part and am firmly convinced that the main reason VERTIGO
transcends all
of Hitchcock's other work is the
performance, the sensuality (and vulnerability) of Kim Novak.
Whatever tensions may have existed
during the shoot, Kim far exceeds any other 'Hitchcock blonde' with the
strength of her
performance. Vera was beautiful,
but did NOT possess the ethereal quality of Kim. Eva Marie Saint, Grace
Kelly and even
'Madeleine' Carroll do not come
close. When I first showed the picture to my friend and colleague Dr George
Miller (MAD MAX,
LORENZO'S OIL, WITCHES OF EASTWICK),
who you may be aware is a student of Joseph Campbell et al, he commented
he had never seen a more perfect
embodiment of the Jungian 'anima' than Kim Novak in VERTIGO. Kim's Madeleine
is simply
the perfect female.
I am of the opinion the repressed
Hitch (and I'm NOT talking about the Spoto construct) was quite out of
his depth with Kim, who
gave a performance of such godlike
sensuality and such vulnerabilty and humanity as the 'sad' Judy, that in
my opinion Kim
deserves a great deal of the credit
for the film's 'masterpiece' status. I wonder if she knows for example
that esteemed Aussie
film critic Tom Ryan named his daughter
Madeleine.
It is probably transparently obvious
that movie director and aficionado of Hitchcock or not, I was in love with
Kim Novak. She
remains one of my yardsticks of
all things wonderful about 'goddesses' of the screen, and of the mystery
and wonder of the
opposite sex.
And VERTIGO is one hell of a movie
- largely because of her.
2. From Joel Gunz, USA.
REMEMBERING KIM NOVAK'S PERFORMANCE IN VERTIGO
By the time I was 17 years old, I
had seen almost every film in the Alfred Hitchcock canon. Hence, when it
was announced that
_Vertigo_ (one of the last few that
I had _not_ seen) would finally be freed from litigation in 1983, I was
ecstatic. Being a
teenager I was still free to choose
my obsessions, and weeks before the new print of the film arrived in Portland,
Oregon I had
nearly memorized the chapter on
_Vertigo_ in John Russell Taylor's biography of the director, _Hitch_.
For me, this was the
cinema event of the year.
I had no way of knowing that it would also turn out to be one of the greatest
cinema events of
my life.
In spite of my prior research for
the movie, I was about as unprepared for Kim Novak's performance of Madeleine
as Pearl
Harbor was for the Kamikaze attack
on December 7, 1941. Madeleine was everything I thought I desired
in a woman at
that time, in all of her glorious
contradictions: timid, audacious, intelligent, sophisticated, mysterious,
simple, complicated - often all in
the same breath. I will never
forget the devastation of suffering her loss twice in the period of about
60 minutes. Even after the
movie ended and the house lights
came up, I sat in stunned, slackjawed silence, my eyes fixed on the curtains
covering the movie
screen like a red velvet burial
shroud. People stared at me as they filed out of the theater.
Later, I went to a vintage shop and
bought a dark three-button suit
just like James Stewart's in his role as Scottie Ferguson. Like I said,
I was 16. I'll obsess my way,
and you obsess yours.
Novak's performance brought about
a sea change in me as to how I viewed not only Hitchcock's movies, but
also film in general.
In the years B.V. (Before _Vertigo_)
I was drawn to Hitchcock films because I enjoyed his technical prowess.
The very word 'montage' -
as uttered by Hitch - held an almost mystical fascination for me; its concepts
were a Rosetta
Stone-like key to interpreting the
hieroglyphics of film imagery. _Vertigo_ changed all that. For the
first time in many years, I
was utterly, completely, moved by
a screen performance. Actually, 'moved' is an understatement.
Thanks to Ms. Novak, I was
shoved headlong into an emotional
abyss - one with stucco walls and a tile roof not dissimilar to those of
Mission San Juan
Bautista. In my psyche, Madeleine's
bones remain there, twisted and sunbleached, to this day.
Happily, _Vertigo_ remains a perennial
screen favorite. I can pretty much count on seeing the film return
to one of our more
culturally ambitious independent
theaters at least once a year. For that reason, I'm proud to say
that I've never seen the movie on
video. Nor would I want to.
Kim Novak gave us a big screen performance, and watching it on TV would
be like listening to
Maria Callas' performance of _Carmen_
on a clock radio. Novak's Madeleine is, perhaps by definition, unobtainable.
Still, I'm
grateful for the few images of her
that exist so that I, like other Scottie Fergusons, may sit in a darkened
theater and will her, one
more time, back to life.
3. [Mr] 'Kari S.'/ Kari Paananen, Turku, Finland.
What I want Kim Novak to know
I saw Vertigo for the first
time somewhere in the mid-eighties. I didn't understand it then. The concept
of losing your loved-one
was too much for me to grasp - I
hadn't even been in love by that time.
But a few years ago, when Vertigo
was restored, I fell in love with the film. Now, I had fallen in love,
separated and been in love
several times in real life, so perhaps
that's the thing that made me realize the greatness of this picture. There
is something in this
film that moves me deeply everytime
I sit down to view it. I try not to do it too often, since I don't want
to spoil the experience of
it - once a year is about enough.
I don't recall seeing any of the
films of Kim Novak that she made before Vertigo, apart from Picnic
by Joshua Logan. As for the
later ones, I saw The Mirror
Crack'd (From Side to Side), when it was released. Although
that was more Elizabeth Taylor's show
- I do remember Kim's storming entrance
however. Vertigo seems to be in a league of its own. Ms Novak must
be so proud for
having been in a film like that.
Her voice, to me, is one essential
part of Vertigo. When I think about Vertigo, I see a few
flashing images and hear the voice of
Kim Novak. I remember especially
the scene at the beach, when Madeleine tells Scotty about the location
of the dream she's
been having ('There's a tower and
a bell and a garden below...'). I have compared that scene (and others)
on the DVD, where
there are dubbed versions in Spanish,
in Italian, in French and in German. None of the dubbed versions match
the original, the
intensity of it. Thank God they
don't dub films here in Finland.
Being a Hitchcock fan, I realize
that a lot of the magic of Vertigo is due to him, not forgetting
the score, cinematography or
editing... But it would not be the
same without Kim Novak's performance.
I want Kim Novak to know that this
35 year old Finnish man thinks highly of her and her work - and is also
introducing Vertigo to
new people, whenever there's a chance.
By the way, the Finnish title of Vertigo is Punainen kyynel
(Red Tear), referring to that necklace.
4. [Mr] Sandy McLendon, USA.
I find Kim Novak's performance in
'Vertigo' remarkable, all the more so when one considers how she may have
found its key.
For me, that key is what must have
been her very deep understanding of the manipulation in 'Vertigo's' script.
Like Judy Barton,
Kim Novak had come from an unglamorous,
solidly Middle American place to a big, glamorous city. Once in Hollywood,
she was
treated as every movie star is -
which is to say at least as much property as person. As with any star,
Novak was required to
dress, speak and move in ways that
fostered fantasy and glamour. The real Kim Novak seems often to have been
ignored; the
glamour was far more important to
Hollywood than the person behind it. I view Novak's early years at Columbia
as roughly
analogous to the tutelage Judy got
from Gavin Elster, gaining her some things she wanted, but at a personal
cost she could not
have foreseen.
When Novak went from her home studio,
Columbia, to film 'Vertigo' at Paramount, there seem to have been more
parallels
between actress and character. Every
woman has views on what she feels good wearing, and what she does not -
and
Hitchcock's wardrobe requirements
for his film are said to have violated every one of Novak's own preferences.
After being
treated at Columbia in the way Gavin
Elster treated Judy, Ms. Novak was now being asked to do precisely what
Scottie asked of
Judy - being dressed up to a man's
specifications. What I find remarkable is that Ms. Novak herself
seems to have understood
the parallels at the time, and was
more than actress enough to put her discomfiture to work for her character.
Her work in
'Vertigo' is quiet and yet searing
in its portrayal of the damage done to a young woman by men who do not
consider her important
for herself: instead, she's important
to them only because of what she can do for them. So many people see 'Vertigo'
as being
about a dual role or personality;
I think Kim Novak went much deeper. Her portrayal is that of a woman being
forced to play roles
- and who loses her life in an attempt
to become one real, complete woman.
I think that 'Vertigo' does not end
with 'Vertigo'; I believe that 'Vertigo' spills over into Novak's next
film, 'Bell, Book and Candle.'
Ms. Novak had just completed a movie
about the damage done by manipulation; 'Bell, Book and Candle' is about
someone who
resists manipulation. The fun, glamorous
witch she played, Gillian Holroyd, is someone whom others want to remain
a witch for their own selfish reasons. Gillian wants to define herself
as a genuine human being, capable of love and respect, and voluntarily
gives up her powers to achieve that humanity. To me, the two films are
two sides of the same coin - Judy Barton and Gillian Holroyd have much
the same issues, only Gillian wins where Judy loses. I see other Kim Novak
roles that express the same idea: a woman who is intent on being herself,
sometimes against all odds.
5. Jim Davidson, California, USA.
A trip down the Monterey Penninsula
last weekend for the AT&T golf tournament led to the required stop
by one of the great
locations of any Hitchcock film:
Mission San Juan Bautista. It seems in that place as if time has
stopped, and you can still see
Kim Novak as Madeleine running across
the grass plaza from the stables, pursued by James Stewart as Scotty.
Novak's
performance in "Vertigo" is no doubt
one of the great, underrated performances of all time; hers is unquestionably
the critical role
in a film that is now thought of
as one of the greatest ever made. Her ability to convincingly play
the beautiful, tortured Madeleine
Elster and make us, the audience
- as well as Scotty - believe her, is undoubtedly the key to the film's
success.
But I also wanted to mention another
part that Novak played that has similar qualities to that of Madeleine
Elster/Judy Barton: as
Polly the Pistol in Billy Wilder's
"Kiss Me, Stupid". Here again, Novak plays a woman who must impersonate
another woman to
please a man, and she manages to
pull this difficult part off and again make it believable to the audience.
This must have been a
very challenging role to manage
under challenging circumstances, and Kim Novak produces a gem of a performance
in this film
that has never been recognized for
the comic masterpiece that it is. Hopefully "Kiss Me, Stupid" will
someday be released on
DVD and new audiences will come
to see the remarkable performance that Ms. Novak gave in this film.
On a personal level, I can say that
I saw Kim Novak in person at the premiere of the restored "Vertigo" a few
years ago in San
Francisco, and she was gracious,
charming and beautiful. The audience fell in love with her all over
again. It's just too bad that
the movie stars of today don't have
the grace, style and elegance of Kim Novak!
6. Eric Carlson, California, USA.
In "Vertigo," Kim Novak gives one
of the greatest performances in a Hitchcock film, and one that was unjustly
snubbed by the
Academy (she should have been nominated
and deserved to win). Oscar or not, the performance lives on as one
of the greatest
in film. She is believably one woman
and then believably another. She plays an unattainable goddess (watched
by Stewart), a
tantalizingly attainable goddess
(courted by Stewart), and a been-around shopgirl (courted again by Stewart)
with equal aplomb.
And then, in the third act, she
devastatingly essays the sad, yearning desperation of a woman willing to
obliterate her very
personality for the love of an unbalanced
man, giving up her life in the process. A great performance.
Amazingly,
in the same year (1958), opposite
the same leading man (James Stewart), Novak is seen in the much lighter
and frothier "Bell,
Book, and Candle" sexily ruling
the screen as a galaxy of scene-stealing male stars floats around her (Stewart,
Jack Lemmon,
Ernic Kovacs.) That's a film that
makes you ache for the color and glamour of the late fifties. "Vertigo"
and "Bell, Book, and
Candle" by themselves would earn
Novak stardom.
Novak is a great star because she
is a beauty who makes us feel. The entrapped rural festival queen
in "Picnic," the loving
girlfriend of a junkie in
"The Man With the Golden Arm," the coveted housewife who enters an ill-fated
affair much more out of
lonlieness than lust in "Strangers
When We Meet."
Novak could offer fun times, too.
She shines in "Boys Night Out" (skillfully leading on three married wolves
for a sociology
experiment while holding them at
bay and winning their bachelor friend for her own husband). She's
all sexy fun in Wilder's
controversial sexy farce "Kiss Me
Stupid," sending up Monroe and waking up Dean Martin for a great self-parody.
A personal
favorite: "The Notorious Landlady,"
where Jack Lemmon stands in for Everyman in getting a chance with the unattainable
(great
bathtub scene, too!) A fun exercise:
her delightfully catty exchanges with Elizabeth Taylor (opposite Rock Hudson
and Tony
Curtis) as warring movie divas in
"The Mirror Crack'd."
Like every male from nine to ninety,
I had a crush on Kim Novak, and still do. I live in California and
often visit the beautiful
Carmel coast where I believe she
lives. Just knowing she's out there somewhere is a pleasure and a
comfort. She beat
Hollywood at its own sex-goddess
game, acted in films both great and entertaining, and will be remembered
for years to come.
7. Rick W., Philadelphia, USA.
Although I just cruised into this
website by chance - it was linked to an article about PSYCHO, which I viewed
again today (Feb.
27) - I am what you might say a
long-time fan of Kim Novak and of VERTIGO. It is my favorite movie
of all time. No matter
how many times I watch this film,
I get all tensed up and weep throughout the scene where "Madeline" "falls"
to her death. And
during the climactic scene when
Judy and Scottie go up the tower again, and he cruelly berates this woman
who obsesses him, I
sob. Why should this film
affect me so? Perhaps because dozens of books and scholarly articles
could be written about the
power and the universality of this
movie. (Oh, excuse me, they HAVE been!) Definitely, Kim Novak's
(and Jimmy Stewart's)
performance is compelling.
Just think - during the first part of the film she is Kim Novak, playing
the part of Judy Barton, who is
pretending to be Madeline - who
is pretending to be possesed by "Carlotta"! Also, the first time
that Scottie meets Judy was, for
me, a watershed event - it was the
first time I was fully aware that women have, um, breasts! (Did I
mention that my mother
took me to see this film when I
was SIX YEARS OLD?) It was also during this picture that a seemingly
throwaway line by
Madeline - to the effect that everybody
HAS to die - made me realize that, as careful as I could possibly be about
avoiding car
crashes, heart attacks, and so on,
I HAVE to die some day. Is it any wonder that, at age 50, I find
this film even more hypnotizing
and gripping than even most Hitchcock
scholars, fans, and fanatics?
8. Sarah Nichols, Connecticut, USA.
Am finding it difficult to express
just exactly how I feel about the wonderful Kim.Novak. I want to say that
the scene in Vertigo,
after Stewart brings her back to
the hotel from their first date, is as once achingly sad and beautiful,
and that the shot of her by the
window, bathed in that ethereal
green, breaks my heart. Resignation and pain pass across her face like
nothing I've seen in any
other film. I think of Thoreau's
phrase: 'the mass of men live lives of quiet desperation'. We see
it here, writ in silence, the dream
of an unconditional love draining
away.