Robert Scott [Start</mark></</mark>mark> of Recording] [00:00]I: This is an interview with Robert Scott for the Scottish Broadcasting Heritage Group's Oral History Project. The interviewer is Janet McBain and the date is 13 May 2017. OK, Robert, when and where were you born? R: I was born and brought up i[…]
[…] lot of revolutions going on and my father sent me and the governor's son out of the country in a plane so that we should be saved from the opposing part</mark></</mark>mark>ies. And I guess revolutions have gone on ever since, so I have been back to Guatemala to see it and to take my son, Tony there, but I didn't live […]
[…]ee years and I thought that wasn’t bad and I didn’t know what to do so I took a … I went to University college to do law on a sort of, almost like a part</mark></</mark>mark>-time basis, I used to work in the mornings and go to college in the afternoons and evenings and eventually did a law degree. NS Sorry, you us[…]
[…]e said I'll speak to him. He came back the next night and said go along and see somebody called Anderson, and this chap obviously didn't want me to start</mark></</mark>mark> with, he maybe had somebody else in mind. He said how tall are you? I said just about, Ray Massey might be about an inch taller than me, I was abo[…]
[…]on at a posh school because my aunt was the headmistress of it. [laughter] It was an expensive school which I would never have gone to otherwise, so part</mark></</mark>mark>ly, my accent is part</mark></</mark>mark>ly a result of that.Kitty Marshall Page 2Which school was that?I had a very brilliant brother and I think that’s part</mark></</mark>mark>ly..[…]
[…]sons) Interviewer: Paul Frith (PF) Date 05/</mark>03/</mark>2019 Length 02:17:14PF: This is an interview with Brian Pritchard. Thank you for taking part</mark></</mark>mark> in the interview today. So just to start</mark></</mark>mark> can I ask how your interests in films and photography developed and what were your first experiences of c[…]
[…]pot to pee in, everything was cut [price], it was packed, like Piccadilly Circus. The other anecdote I’ve got about it is – I think it was the early part</mark></</mark>mark> of the war - a man called Wendell Willkie who was a potential president of the United States, he was a Republican. He came over here obviously to […]
[…]later to become Pamela Mann Francis, feature film continuity; interviewer Alan Lawson, recorded on the sixth of January 1994 side one, the original start</mark></</mark>mark> of this interview is missing. Pam was born in London in 1927 and went to a secondary modern school in Wembley. Her father was in the motor busines[…]
[…]h of February 1991. With interjections from his wife, Sarah Erulkar side one.John Taylor 1:11 That now, we can do that later, right. We start</mark></</mark>mark> with you, Peter, whererever you might start</mark></</mark>mark> page one,Peter de Normanville 1:25 we think a bit later than that you choose, and that's s[…]