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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Glamour -> 
Tippi Hedren accuses Hitchcock of sexual harassment in memoir
    2016-11-02  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    蒂比·海德莉在回忆录中指责希区柯克性骚扰

    Actress Tippi Hedren graphically chronicles* in a new memoir incidents in which she says she was sexually assaulted* and harassed* by famed British director Alfred Hitchcock during her star turns in “The Birds” and “Marnie.”

    “Tippi,” which was on sale yesterday, documents Hedren’s rise from fashion model to movie star and “Hitchcock blonde” after the director spotted her in a commercial and cast her in the lead of the 1963 thriller “The Birds.”

    The book by Hedren, mother of actress Melanie Griffith and grandmother to “Fifty Shades of Grey” star Dakota Johnson, offers a rare, first-person account of the rotund “master of suspense” that contrasts sharply with Hitchcock’s public image as a mild-mannered*, self-effacing* English gentleman.

    What emerges is the unflattering portrait of a powerful director who nursed a dark, uncontrollable obsession* with the icy-blonde leading ladies of his films.

    Hitchcock died in 1980 at age 80. A representative for his estate did not immediately return requests for comment.

    Hedren, 86, recalled Hitchcock making unwanted advances during her grueling* six-month shoot for “The Birds” in 1962, including one encounter while riding back to her hotel with the filmmaker in his limousine*.

    “With no warning, he tried to kiss me,” she wrote. The actress said she pushed the director away and left the vehicle.

    The breaking point, she wrote, came in 1964 during production of Hedren’s second Hitchcock film, “Marnie,” when the director “suddenly grabbed me and put his hands on me.”

    “It was sexual, it was perverse*, and it was ugly, and I couldn’t have been more shocked and more repulsed*,” she added, alleging* that Hitchcock threatened to ruin her career when she insisted on ending her contract, which she did that day.

    “It was the early 1960s. Sexual harassment and stalking were terms that didn’t exist back then,” she wrote.

    “Besides, he was Alfred Hitchcock, one of Universal’s superstars, and I was just a lucky little blonde* model he’d rescued from relatively obscurity*. Which one of us was more valuable to the studio, him or me?” (SD-Agencies)Tippi Hedren

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