Above, a fun shot of U.S. actress Tippi Hedren, née Nathalie Hedren, made when she was filming the 1964 Alfred Hitchcock thriller Marnie. Despite having one of the odder pseudonyms of the era there’s no elaborate story involved. Her father nicknamed her Tippi when she was four. Hedren also appeared in such films as The Birds, The Harrad Experiment, and the unbelievable Roar. Have you heard of Roar. No? Well, it’s certainly one of the most bizarre movie projects in history.
Rather than get into the plot (such as it is), we’ll just tell you that during its making Hedren broke her leg after being bucked off an elephant’s back, and received thirty-eight stitches after a lioness gnawed the back of her head. In addition, her daughter Melanie Griffith, cinematographer Jan de Bont, and producer Noel Marshall were also mauled by lions. Griffith needed fifty stitches in her face and plastic surgery, de Bont needed one hundred twenty stitches and his scalp sewn back in place, and lucky Noel Marshall merely developed gangrene.
If you haven’t seen Roar and are an aficionado of weird cinema, we can’t recommend watching that one highly enough. Ironically, while we’ve seen that all-time obscurity, we haven’t seen the well-known Marnie. But there’s a reason—one of the worst people we ever knew, someone who stole several of our most prized belongings, was named Marni, so avoiding that reminder has kept us from getting around to the film. But it isn’t like that’s Tippi’s fault, so her movie is finally in the queue. When we watch it we’ll report back.