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  • Contributors

Thomas Leitch is Professor of English at the University of Delaware. His books include Find the Director and Other Games, The Encyclopedia of Alfred Hitchcock, and A Companion to Alfred Hitchcock, co-edited with Leland Poague.

Mark William Padilla serves on the faculty of Christopher Newport University. He is the recipient of the Ph.D. in comparative literature, and teaches classes in classical studies and in the honors program. His earlier research interests focused on Ancient Greek drama, society, and philosophy, and have now expanded to classical reception and film studies. His book Classical Myth in Four Films of Alfred Hitchcock will be followed in 2018 by a second study on the same subject, also published by Lexington Books, on nine additional films.

Ned Schantz is Associate Professor of English at McGill University. He is the author of Gossip, Letters, Phones: The Scandal of Female Networks in Film and Literature and recent essays in Camera Obscura, Criticism, and Senses of Cinema. This article is part of a larger project on Hitchcock and hospitality.

Michael Slowik is an assistant professor in the College of Film and Moving Image at Wesleyan University. He is the author of After the Silents: Hollywood Film Music in the Early Sound Era, 1926-1934, and numerous articles on film sound, including work published in American Music; Cinema Journal; Music, Sound, and the Moving Image; Journal of Popular Film and Television; and New Review of Film and Television Studies.

David Sterritt is editor-in-chief of Quarterly Review of Film and Video, contributing writer at Cineaste, film professor at the Maryland Institute College of Art, professor emeritus at Long Island University, former film critic of The Christian Science Monitor, and author or editor of many books, including The Films of Alfred Hitchcock (Cambridge University Press, 1993), and Simply Hitchcock (Simply Charly, 2017).

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