I said to Spencer, "I've got an idea. The motion picture camera will be locked off, steel riveted to the stage floor so nobody can move it. Next to you we'll have one of those old-fashioned cameras with the big plate behind it and an artist who will sketch you. I'm only going to shoot your face, it will be so effective if we can see your face changing. There will be a long make-up table, all the pieces for your changes will be laid out and you'll be in a barber chair with wheels." Spencer was getting so excited. We went to see the director, Victor Fleming, and he said, "Harold, Spencer and I have faith in you, go ahead and do it. You have to go up and see Victor Saville, he's the producer." Saville said, "Young man, you're just the film editor on this picture, this is none of your goddamn business and I'm going to have you fired!" So I left the lot and went home. My wife Zelda said, "What are you doing home?" I said, "I've been fired." Now the phone rings and it's the assistant director and he says, "We hear you're not on the lot, stick by the phone." Fleming canceled the day's shooting, he had Ingrid Bergman, Lana Turner, and Spencer Tracy on the set-that's an expensive day. He and Spencer Tracy went up to see Louis B. Mayer and they said, "We want Harold to do it, it's the only way, or else we have to do it the old way with the cutaways." Louis B. Mayer picked up the phone, called Ben Goetz at the London Studio and said, "Call Victor Saville and tell him you have a picture that's in bad trouble over there and that he's got to go to London tomorrow morning."