The current view controller stays "underneath" the modal view controller and will reappear when you call
- (void)dismissModalViewControllerAnimated:(BOOL)animated
either on the modal view or the parent/presenting view controller (as the parent/presenting view controller's view is no longer visible, it's view may be unloaded when the system requires memory, and reloaded on dismiss).
From this method's documentation:
The parent view controller is responsible for dismissing the modal
view controller it presented using the
presentModalViewController:animated: method. If you call this method
on the modal view controller itself, however, the modal view
controller automatically forwards the message to its parent view
controller.
If you present several modal view controllers in succession, and thus
build a stack of modal view controllers, calling this method on a view
controller lower in the stack dismisses its immediate child view
controller and all view controllers above that child on the stack.
When this happens, only the top-most view is dismissed in an animated
fashion; any intermediate view controllers are simply removed from the
stack. The top-most view is dismissed using its modal transition
style, which may differ from the styles used by other view controllers
lower in the stack.
Also note the change in iOS 5
Prior to iOS 5.0, if a view did not have a parent view controller and
was being presented modally, the view controller that was presenting
it would be returned. This is no longer the case. You can get the
presenting view controller using the presentingViewController
property.