Joe Mendoza

[…]ly using Otter, https://get.otter.ai/interview-transcription/.It provides a basic, but unverified or proofread transcript of the interview. Therefore, the British Entertainment History Project (BEHP) accepts no liability for any misinterpretation of the content of this interview.However, the BE[…]

Michael Clarke

[…]ly using Otter, https://get.otter.ai/interview-transcription/.It provides a basic, but unverified or proofread transcript of the interview. Therefore, the British Entertainment History Project (BEHP) accepts no liability for any misinterpretation of the content of this interview.However, the BE[…]

Pat Jackson

[…] fun because we got a lot of students from all over Europe, and I really grew up with a sort of League of Nations, which was fun! I went to Bryanston for one term. The only reason I went to Bryanston was because it was the only school at the time that didn't want people to have taken the 'Common Ent[…]

Cy Young transcript

[…] go out and get a job and because he worked for the post office I got a job as a […]

Joan Kemp

[…] include The Citadel (1938) and Goodbye Mr Chips (1939), both for MGM-British, and Busman’s Honeymoon (1940). She spent much of […]

Pat Jackson

[…] League of Nations, which was fun! I went to Bryanston for one term. The only reason I went to Bryanston […]

Pat Jackson

[…] League of Nations, which was fun! I went to Bryanston for one term. The only reason I went to Bryanston […]

Cy Young

[…]ies early 1950s. It feels.BDG What films stick out in your mind?CY Really. How did that issue exist. The Superman serials many ideas is a long time before I mean recognizing people in the film has made them an idea that was just as well.BG How did you start in films?CY I left school I was about 14 b[…]

Joan Kemp-Welch

[…]e 1Roy Fowler: '91 and we're at John P. Hamilton's in Paddington and we have a very distinguished lady, Joan Kemp-Welch, of, I think, absolutely formidable achievement. So we'll start at the very beginning, Joan, and the origins. When and where you were born, family background, things like that[…]

Teddy Darvas

[…]ings. And, of course, Bernard Cribbens was absolutely brilliant in it. I mean, it was a Chaplinesque performance. It was for that film that I got the BAFTA Award for Best Editing.John Legard: Oh you did.p. 106Teddy Darvas: Bernard loved the film so much, he was chairman of the Guild of Fil[…]
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