[…] was perhaps his most lasting contribution to our industries: the ACTT History Project. It began in 1985 at a Union […]
[…] commercials at Garretts and he was appointed Shop Steward at ACTT. Briefly out of work for family reasons 1973 and […]
[…] years ago Ralph Bond, documentary filmmaker and Vice-President of the ACTT film and television union, sat down in the union’s […]
[…] founding members of the film technicians’ union the ACT (later ACTT, then BECTU, and now the BECTU Sector of Prospect). […]
[…] The History Project was established by members of one of BECTU’s founder unions, the ACTT. [Source: BECTU 1 November 2010]
[…] of the BECTU History Project – from a reminiscence during an ACTT conference to an internationally important archive”. Read the original article […]
[…]was literally a very small commercial film company. So small, I shouldn't say this within the words of the walls of bedroom. But it was so small that ACTT didn't bother, wasn't interested in whether the staff were members or not. And they made commercial films, and they had a dubbing theatre, and ed[…]
[…]t of the job. But so it wasn't, it was a bit boring, really. But what it would work would allow me to was to get a union ticket. So I actually got my ACTT ticket when I was at visit it, I got a couple of people to sponsor me and I managed to get into the camera branch camera department, even though […]
[…]anada I was on the Shop Committee then. I was the Shop Steward for the Producer/Director section and Malcolm Foster was the main Shop Steward for the ACTT [Association of Cinematograph, Television and Allied Technicians] and he came up to sort of say goodbye to me and to wish me luck at STV and I ca[…]
[…]was literally a very small commercial film company. So small, I shouldn't say this within the words of the walls of bedroom. But it was so small that ACTT didn't bother, wasn't interested in whether the staff were members or not. And they made commercial films, and they had a dubbing theatre, and ed[…]