Fred Tomlin

[…] down and then it was taken over by a motion picture company - I'm not at all sure whether it […]

Bill Girdlestone

[…]on and a man came out and standing there, says, ‘What d'you want? What are you looking at?’ I said, ‘I was looking at your billboard, sir, to see the pictures you're running.’ Because they used to have a billboard in those days, and I'm talking about 1912, with their two Westerns, French comic, Ital[…]

Paul Fox

[…]ed that the Royal Television Society became the leading television society in the country, I mean, it was far more important in television terms than BAFTA, which after all, also embraced film.  I’m not decrying BAFTA.  I think BAFTA do a fine job.  But after all it’s film and televis[…]

Leonard Harris

[…] white photography this last year, I think it was a BAFTA award. Manny Yospa: Do you mean Bob Krasker? Leonard […]

Leonard (Len) Harris

[…] it later. As a matter of fact he just got the award for the best colour photography and black and white photography this last year, I think it was a BAFTA award.Manny Yospa: Do you mean Bob Krasker?Leonard Harris: No not Bob Krasker.Alan Lawson: No, no, no, Bob Krasker is dead!Leonard Harris: Oh, a[…]

Sydney Samuelson

[…]en, Orson Welles talked about making a movie as being the greatest toy train set anybody could ever have, my train set was one day when I was told at BAFTA that they would like me to look after the theatre and how it should be designed and what the technical equipment should be and that was my train[…]

Philip Donnellan

[…]ous people watching from points of advantage. And I finally pulled aside the brown paper and in there was an empty seven-pound bully beef tin, an old picture post and a roll of newspaper.  And so for a moment I thought oh that’s funny and within a second of course I realised it was a joke [LAUG[…]

Virginia McKenna

[…] can be seen by people still. So Bill’s career then really did move on; he did a wonderful film about poaching called Bloody Ivory (1978) which got a BAFTA nomination.[99] He edited two stories together; he did the work of David Sheldrick against the poachers, because there was such a huge poaching […]

Charles Crichton

[…]w very avant garde type of films. Puffin Asquith I think originated that, but he wasn't there when I was was . So the Kordas came to Oxford to make a picture called Men of Tomorrow.SC : Directed by Leontine Sagan .CC: That's right. So I went to see Sagan, who was very unhelpful, but there was this f[…]
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