FILE - This 1954 file photo released by Paramount Pictures shows Jimmy Stewart, left, and Grace Kelly in Alfred Hitchcock's film, "Rear Window." A producing team has won the theatrical stage rights to “Rear Window,” the noir tale that Alfred Hitchcock made into a classic film. Producer Charlie Lyons, director Jay Russell and actor Tim Guinee announced Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012, that their two-year hunt for the rights have been successful and they’re hoping to mount the show on Broadway. The film version, starring Stewart and Kelly, tells the story of a wheelchair-bound witness to a possible murder. (AP Photo/Paramount Pictures, file)
October 24, 2012 - 10:54 AM
NEW YORK, N.Y. - A producing team has won the theatrical stage rights to "Rear Window," the noir tale that Alfred Hitchcock made into a classic film.
Producer Charlie Lyons, director Jay Russell and actor Tim Guinee announced Wednesday that their two-year hunt for the rights have been successful and they're hoping to mount the show on Broadway.
"Rear Window" is based on a Cornell Woolrich short story, "It Had to Be Murder," that was first published in February 1942 in Dime Detective Magazine.
The film version, starring Jimmy Stewart and Grace Kelly, tells the story of a wheelchair-bound witness to a possible murder.
Literary agent Sheldon Abend in 1971 purchased a copyright to the short story on which "Rear Window" was based. The new producing team bought the first stage option ever granted by Abend's trust.
Lyons has produced such films as "The Water Horse," ''The Guardian" and "Ladder 49." Russell directed "Ladder 49" and "My Dog Skip." Guinee stars on NBC's "Revolution" and Showtime's "Homeland."
News from © The Associated Press, 2012