Alfred Hitchcock didn't have a belly button.
Alfred Hitchcock Didn't Have a Belly Button
Of all the bizarre trivia surrounding Alfred Hitchcock—his fear of eggs, his elaborate practical jokes, his legendary cameos—perhaps the strangest is also the most demonstrably true: the Master of Suspense had no belly button.
This wasn't some genetic anomaly or birth defect. Hitchcock was born perfectly normal, umbilical cord and all. But somewhere between directing Rear Window and Psycho, his navel vanished.
The Smoking Gun on a Film Set
For years, this rumor floated around Hollywood with all the credibility of "Elvis is alive" gossip. Then actress Karen Black went on record. In a 2008 interview with filmmaker Johan Grimonprez, Black described working with Hitchcock on Family Plot (1976), his final film.
One day, thinking the director was upset with her, Black asked if something was wrong. Hitchcock replied, "Oh no dear, I don't have a belly button." Then he lifted his shirt.
Black saw approximately a foot of horizontal stitching across his abdomen—and no navel whatsoever. Hitchcock explained matter-of-factly: "I had an operation and they stitched across it."
The Medical Backstory
In 1957, Hitchcock's health hit a crisis point. He was admitted to Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in January for a navel hernia, then rushed back in March for emergency gallbladder surgery to remove obstructing gallstones. He also suffered from chronic colitis.
During one of these multiple abdominal operations, surgeons apparently stretched skin over the area where his belly button had been. Whether this was medically necessary or an unavoidable consequence of the procedure isn't clear, but the result was permanent.
By the time he was directing Family Plot nearly two decades later, the Master of Suspense had become a man without a navel.
The Most Hitchcockian Fact About Hitchcock
There's something perfectly on-brand about this revelation. Hitchcock built his career on unsettling audiences—making them question what they saw, fear the ordinary, and find horror in the mundane. That he himself carried a genuine anatomical oddity hidden beneath his suit adds another layer to his mystique.
He was also famously private about his body, despite his unmistakable silhouette. The belly button story only emerged because he chose to share it, pulling up his shirt like a magician revealing the secret behind a trick.
Most people go through life never giving their belly button a second thought. Leave it to Alfred Hitchcock to make even that memorable.