Norman Bates

Norman Bates is a fictional character created by American author Robert Bloch as the main protagonist in his 1959 horror novel Psycho. He has an alter, Mother, who takes from the form of his abusive mother, and later victim, Norma, who in his daily life runs the Bates Motel.

Norman Bates
Psycho character
Anthony Perkins as Norman Bates in Psycho (1960).
First appearancePsycho (1959 novel)
Last appearancePsycho: Sanitarium (novel)
Created byRobert Bloch
Portrayed by
Others:
  • Oz Perkins (II, child)
  • Ryan Finnigan (IV, child)
  • Henry Thomas (IV, teenager)
  • Beckham Skodje, Luke Roessler, Nicholas Holmes (TV series, child)
In-universe information
AliasMother
Robert Newman
GenderMale
OccupationFormer owner of the Bates Motel
Family
  • Norma Bates (mother; deceased)
  • John/Sam Bates (father; deceased)
  • Emma Spool (aunt deceased, films)
  • Unborn child (films)
SpouseDr. Constance "Connie" Forbes-Bates (wife, films)

He was portrayed by Anthony Perkins in the 1960 version of Psycho directed by Alfred Hitchcock and in the Psycho franchise. He was also portrayed by Vince Vaughn in the 1998 version of Psycho, and by Freddie Highmore in the television series Bates Motel (2013–2017).

Unlike the franchise produced by Universal Studios, Norman is not the principal antagonist in Bloch's subsequent novels and is succeeded by copycat killers who assume Norman's identity after his death in Psycho II (1982), although he does return and in the licensed continuation novel Psycho: Sanitarium (2016) by Chet Williamson. There is a wide-ranging assumption that the character was directly inspired by the Wisconsin murderer Ed Gein. With Psycho being optioned for film adaptation as a direct result of media attention on Gein, Bloch later revealed he was inspired more by the circumstances surrounding Gein's case—the idea that "the man next door may be a monster unsuspected even in the gossip-ridden microcosm of small-town life." Years later, when the full details of Gein's crimes were revealed, he was struck by "how closely the imaginary character I'd created resembled the real Ed Gein both in overt act and apparent motivation."

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.