[…]been making films for schools; they were teachers strictly teaching films. His films weren’t to follow such narrow lines. He wanted to give more of a picture of industry for example, of the people who were in industry and the kind of work men were called upon to do, of their attitudes to work and so[…]
[…]ere was quite a lot out of my money.But I existed. And I of course I was enjoying being in London and learning about London, learning about music and pictures and things like that, which one was starved of in New Zealand really.Gloria Sachs 42:03 Did you know you were starved of it until[…]
[…]ht? And whereabouts isHenry Seward 0:35 Hampton Middlesex, yes.Roy Fowler 0:39 And you went on to have a career in the motion picture industry. Was either of your parents associated with films or theater? No, nothing at all. Would you like to tell us what your father did? It'[…]
[…]his name was Super. We got to know quite well after and I met this chap and they said this is Mr Super and he quite looked like me and they had taken pictures of us meeting. We didn't deny the fact. Then we went to Bow Street where they held us for the night unless we produced some bail, some friend[…]
[…] The model articles of association as prescribed in Schedule 2 to The Comp an ies (Mo del Articles) Regulations 2008 […]
[…] map, and then they had some of the different stars to come down for different inserts and one of them […]
[…] I reckon I did do that and I did three picture of them and they were I enjoyed all three. […]
[…] have done. But right at the very end when the picture was looking so stunning. When what we called the […]
[…] to work (uncredited) on Alfred Hitchcock’s Blackmail, ‘Britain’s first talking picture’. (In fact Blackmail was made right on the cusp […]
[…] life, she plays Rose, a woman with a past, forced to choose between a decent but unexciting husband and family, […]