[…] June I believe. I'm here to talk about my life in the film industry.[01:00:16:010] JK: Would you like to say how you started out? BJ: Well basically I had no idea I was coming in the film industry. I went to school, grammar school, being paid for by my father.[01:00:28:460]I was always bo[…]
BEHP transcript DisclaimerThis transcript has been produced automatically using Speechmatics.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[…]
[…]HP transcript DisclaimerThis transcript has been produced automatically 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 a[…]
[…]the film context.That’s right, that too.Like your aunt.So there we are, anyway. We got to...Well, you were starting, you’d started...I’d started with Basic Films, yes. Well now Basic Films then of course were working withfilms for the Ministry of Education. If you remember the Ministry of Education […]
BEHP transcript DisclaimerThis transcript has been produced automatically using Otter.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 interv[…]
[…]he working week?Tubby Englander: [Laughs] The working day was from when you arrived in the morning and you left the studio, that was the working day. Basically I think the working day was from 8 o'clock in the morning - where I was concerned and where the assistant was concerned - 8 o'clock in the m[…]
[…] he started as a messenger boy; he was sent to Hull during the making of Berth 24; during his time at Waterloo he had already been taught some of the basics of camera operating, he filmed an accident at the station while he was cataloguing; in 1948 he was asked to film shots of the Thames for Floods[…]
[…] have it, my mother, with her engineering background had been contacted by a guy called Les Berry, [actually Les Bowie. DS] who ran a studio – it was basically a big unit – on the Slough Trading Estate, and as it happened it was right next door to Gerry Anderson, who was doing Thunderbirds at the ti[…]
[…]the thing. And we looked at various other manufacturers’ products as well. I can’t remember the names. All sorts of miscellaneous projects like that. Basically, we didn’t really develop in the technical sense new products in the UK research lab. Most of that was done in the much larger research labs[…]
[…]p; …as Assistant…no, as Assistant Controller, it was before BBC2 had arrived.I: Oh yes, sorry, yes.R: Basically to give Stuart some help…Stuart Hood some help, because he knew nothing about television. Donald, of course, being Donald, always ran […]