[…]e we begin to ask a lot of questions which have been asked over the years by countless producers and the answers have not been always extremely satisfactory, therefore it is not a healthy state of an industry which says to itself we have a future. Now the television as I understand it is a very diff[…]
[…]a midship made no, I think I'm not certain it was called almost a bride.Unknown Speaker 29:39 Get over who else was in theirs was a great actor of of his day. Yes. Owen, theirs, yes. Did you work with Alfred Hitchcock? Yes, at Gainsborough, at Goon, no go month. Erwin Lee, were you on th[…]
[…] there was a window, and there was a tap on the window, you see. And seen inside was a man, his wife and two children. And the man had come from the factory, he was an Englishman you see. And he knocks on the window and he says, "Would you like to come up and have a drink?" And he said, "Yes I would[…]
[…]hing in the studio was that very first approach to science film at Carlton Hill.AL: Would you rather have done it on a natural location.BM: Oh I like actors and would have liked to have various ideas at various points, I would have liked to have made a feature, I just never had to money to do it. I […]
[…] Lovers (1960), The Innocents (1961) and Glory (1989); Harry Fowler, actor - The Army Game (1959 -61), The Pickwick Papers […]
[…] Muloorina. O ther names that have links with Swale ... actors Bernard Lee (M in early 007 Bond movies) lived […]
[…] and then if I did I would perhaps get an actor sometimes to read the minimal commentary. Yeah. Can we […]
[…] office in Southend. He’s never met any of the other actors who played William. He was offered £40 a week […]