This is one of the few films directed by Hitchcock in which he does not make a cameo.
Alfred Hitchcock
Psycho
Psycho
Alfred Hitchcock makes one of his typical cameo appearances early in the movie at the pet shop where he is seen walking a couple of terriers.
No, Hitchcock did not make a cameo appearance in, nor did he direct, Witness for the Prosecution. The movie was directed by Billy Wilder. You may be thinking of The Paradine Case, a different courtroom drama that was directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
Alfred Hitchcock
Psycho
Psycho
We see Alfred Hitchcock make a cameo appearance as a pedestrian walking past the murder victim's house in the director's 1930 film Murder!
No, he did not.
Alfred Hitchcock makes one of his typical cameo appearances early in the movie at the pet shop where he is seen walking a couple of terriers.
No, Hitchcock did not make a cameo appearance in, nor did he direct, Witness for the Prosecution. The movie was directed by Billy Wilder. You may be thinking of The Paradine Case, a different courtroom drama that was directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
He is the man who misses the bus
Alfred Hitchcock
Lifeboat (1944) was Hitchcock's cameo appearance.
A "cameo" is a piece of jewelry in the form of a carved silhouette. In the theater, the phrase "cameo appearance" was used to refer to a brief appearance in a play or movie, frequently where the actor is not playing any role. For example, Alfred Hitchcock appeared "in cameo" in most of his movies; frequently walking by as an anonymous face in the crowd, or boarding a bus in the background of the scene.
A cameo can be a small broach. It also refers to a small part by someone in a film. Alfred Hitchcock was well known for cameo appearances in his own films