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Angus MacPhail

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Occupation
  
Screenwriter

Died
  
April 22, 1962, Sussex

Role
  
Screenwriter

Name
  
Angus MacPhail

Genre
  
Screenwriting, film


Alma mater
  
Westminster School Trinity Hall, Cambridge

Education
  
Trinity Hall, Cambridge, Westminster School

Movies
  
Spellbound, The Wrong Man, Dead of Night, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Bon Voyage

Similar People
  
Michael Balcon, John Dighton, Basil Dearden, Robert Hamer, Alberto Cavalcanti

Angus MacPhail (8 April 1903 – 22 April 1962) was an English screenwriter, active from the late 1920s, who is best remembered for his work with Alfred Hitchcock.

He was born in London and educated at Westminster School and Trinity Hall, Cambridge where he studied English and edited Granta. He first worked in the film business in 1926 writing subtitles for silent films. He then began writing his own scenarios for Gaumont British Studios and later Ealing Studios under Sir Michael Balcon. During World War II he made films for the Ministry of Information.

One of Alfred Hitchcock’s favourite devices for driving the plots of his stories and creating suspense was what he called the MacGuffin. Ivor Montagu, who worked with Hitchcock on several of his British films, attributes the coining of the term to MacPhail.

References

Angus MacPhail Wikipedia