Kieron Webb

[…]ff and colourist. So they, all of us not really very used to working with faded Eastmancolor negative, so they scanned on a Arriscan, they scanned as best as they felt they could. I suspect there’s more to be said about how that negative could be scanned now I look back. As you say it’s ten years ne[…]

Alan Masson

[…]r]. I don’t think they changed anything. Probably, I’m just guessing, that they were wanting to distinguish themselves from Technicolor which was the best-known name up to that point.CR: And had been so dominant.AM: Yes, in terms of colour and motion pictures.CR: Because even by the late 1960s, earl[…]

John Frame

[…]cter because he would adlib a lot so everything you'd rehearsed had to be kind of thrown out of the window! But we all coped and it was fine. But the best joy I had at STV was a Director called Dougie Moodie. Douglas Moodie. He came from BBC to STV and it was Ibsen's The Wild Duck, the play. I'd see[…]

Adam Fullarton

[…] variety in outside broadcasting in general and particularly the experiences that you've had over the years. How do you actually work out what's your best memory of being involved with outside broadcast? Is that an impossible task? R: It is in a way. I just feel it's quite good to go home after[…]

Peter Ansorge

[…]throughout the 70s, the department expanded until I can remember in 1978, I think it was about then, and I just begun Empire road. David hare won the BAFTA Award for licking Hitler. Gangsters was our series. Alan Bleasdale had just done the first black stuff, film. And this all went out in one sees.[…]
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