Alfred Hitchcock and Alma Reville shared one of Hollywood’s most enduring creative and personal partnerships, a marriage that lasted over 54 years, and a collaboration that shaped the very foundations of Hitchcock’s filmmaking style.
Reville (1899–1982) was born in Nottingham, England, and began working in the film industry as a teenager, starting as a cutter and later becoming an editor, screenwriter, and assistant director. Hitchcock (1899–1980), also British, started in silent films at London’s Famous Players–Lasky studio as a title card designer. They met around 1923 while working at the same studio. Alma was already a skilled editor and continuity expert—her technical expertise and eye for story were invaluable to the young Hitchcock.
The couple married on December 2, 1926, at Brompton Oratory in London. Prior to the marriage, Reville converted from Protestantism to Roman Catholicism, reportedly at the request of Hitchcock’s mother. Their only child, Patricia Hitchcock, was born in 1928.
Reville’s expertise in filmmaking was invaluable to Hitchcock. She worked on nearly all of his films, often uncredited, as an editor, screenwriter, and story consultant. She was known for her keen eye for detail and her ability to spot inconsistencies and flaws in a plot, a talent that Hitchcock greatly admired. A famous example of her sharp eye is her spotting an error in the shower scene of Psycho where the actress Janet Leigh, playing Marion Crane, seemed to swallow after she was supposed to be dead.
Throughout his life, Hitchcock openly acknowledged his wife’s profound influence on his work. In 1979, when he received the American Film Institute’s Life Achievement Award, he famously dedicated the award to four people who had given him “the most affection, appreciation and encouragement, and constant collaboration,” and said that all four of them were Alma Reville.
Reville’s contributions to Hitchcock’s success were immense and have been recognized by film historians. The phrase “The Hitchcock touch had four hands, and two were Alma’s” is often used to describe their collaborative relationship. She passed away in 1982, two years after her husband.
































