Michael Aldridge

[…]tries, we were going through our camera gear and everything was confiscated and we were threatened with jail. And it was only the intervention of the British High Commissioner in Nairobi that actually got us out of the situation, minus the rolls of film. But not an unusual story.Interviewer  17[…]

Peggy Gick

[…]y films on at BIP, we couldn't have had much stage space, I can't remember exactly how much we had.John Legard: That sounds quite a healthy period in British filmmaking...Peggy Gick: It was very busy, yes.John Legard: ...in 1935 we're talking about, '34, '35?Peggy Gick: [???] Then I went to [Walton […]

Harry Manley

[…]ional’; they had very few personal customers but a lot of film units set up for companies who believed they could produce their own industrial films; British Transport Films started on 16mm Kodak reversal in 1953/4 for their travelogue films which were then blown up to Technicolor; the BBC never use[…]

Dawn Stanford

[…]ddy's chair? Or is it your chair?Yes. So I went through that.What else can I say toyou about when I came back here? Where did I get a job? That was a national.Manny Yospa  36:49  a truce.Dawn Stanford  36:52  I was in the house visiting two artners Well, I wasn't actually healthy[…]
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