[…] the...?Charles Wilder: Well it's you know - I can't remember quite honestly.Margaret Thomson: Were you working in the central accounting or were you accountant for a film, for a production?Charles Wilder: No not in those days no, it was central accounting. Going back again to the old days, I mentio[…]
BECTU History Project Interview with Philip Donnellan – documentary, writer, producerInterview Date(s): 28 & 29 June 1991Interview number: 206Interviewer: Colin MoffatSide 1Colin Moffat: The copyright of this recording is vested in the ACTT History Project. Philip Donnellan: television doc[…]
[…]a less busy night of the week on which to complete all the ancillary paperwork insisted upon by Film Renters and those other executives/area managers/accountants who always insisted on being provided with such documentation! The one small inconvenience was in meeting Press Copy deadlines for newspap[…]
1. Introduction1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website. 1.2 By using our website, you accept […]
1. Introduction 1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website. 1.2 By using our website, you […]
1. Introduction 1.1 These terms and conditions shall govern your use of our website. 1.2 By using our website, you […]
[…] born in Bedfordshire in 1916. He worked initially as an accountant for a biscuit factory, and entered the industry in […]
[…] Gerald Sanger and J Arthur Rank; about Mr Bateman – accountant for Rank; expenses and fiddling. Section 7: More newsreel […]
[…]y Worker: Well I was born in Bedfordshire in 1916. I always wanted to be in the film industry and during the war I got the opportunity - I was a cost accountant, and I got a job at Shepherd's Bush. Much to my surprise I found that the method of costing films was to add up what you'd spent and see wh[…]