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  1. About John Michael Hayes. A native of New York City, John Michael Hayes has had a long and varied career as a psychologist and psychoanalyst in the Baltimore-Washington area. He studied philosophy at the Catholic University of America, (B.A. magna cum laude 1971), where he did graduate studies in counseling and psychology, (M.A. 1972; Ph.D. 1977).

  2. Welcome. Being a psychotherapist is a great privilege – to meet people at critical times, to come to know them deeply, and to help them sort through bewildering, sometimes frightening, often painful, thoughts, feelings, and behavior. At heart psychotherapy is about relationship – relationships past and present – and especially our ...

  3. Aug 1, 2020 · August 1st, 2020. by Christopher Wehner. This is an interview I was really happy to get back in 2004, it was a pleasure to interview such a screenwriting legend as John Michael Hayes. We have also added a neat short interview with him where he discusses characters and Hitchcock. Rear Window is considered to be Hitchcock's most "cinematic" picture.

  4. May 11, 2018 · Dr. John Hayes, PhD, ABPP, Psychologist, Baltimore, MD, 21210, (410) 593-1383, People consult therapists for many reasons. Being a psychotherapist is a great privilege - to meet people at critical ...

  5. John Michael Hayes was an American playwright born in Worcester, Massachusetts. He wrote for newspapers and radio shows before becoming a movie screenwriter. Hayes collaborated with director Alfred Hitchcock on four films: Rear Window (for which he won an Edgar Award and an Oscar nomination), To Catch a Thief, The Trouble with Harry and The Man ...

  6. John Michael Hayes. Highest Rated: 98% Rear Window (1954) Lowest Rated: 20% Judith (1966) Birthday: May 11, 1919. Birthplace: Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. Penned a host of scripts during the ...

  7. John Michael Hayes came aboard in 1950 for the NBC iteration of the show. Sam Spade was a lecherous and treacherous cynic, a template for the hard-boiled detective. The producer who brought him to life on the radio was William Spier, who also wrought Suspense, for which he also hired Hayes.