Edward Dryhurst

[…]Um, there were quite a lot of people employed there at the time, probably about a hundred and fifty all told I would think, including technicians and carpenters, chippies, you know, electricians and so on.Roy Fowler: Yes.Eddie Dryhurst: I would think somewhere of that order.Roy Fowler: Do you know h[…]

Geoffrey MacAdam Foot

[…]think was Becket and Carpentier. Oh, the famous, famous fight, which I think was about 926, or something, I seem remember, in which the bell went and carpenter went into the ring. He didn't want to turn that was that. And that was the end of the fight. My father brought this home, this little bit of[…]

Adolph Simon

[…]s where I say well, you, you will want a, a picture of Kuomintang and all that from the air.00:43:09​And so that worked right.​Another time one of, a carpenter built with a floor foraged by two wood, built a, a well, it can’t be a platform, but [???] to fix a camera, and bolted it [???] camera – the[…]

Reginald (Reggie) Beck

[…]as considered not very complimentary to the Russian system. I was at Denham at the time and we had meetings at least two or three times a week in the carpenters shop, people standing on things and carrying on. The right wing at Denham was saying how wrong it was for the script ever to get to the Rus[…]

Oswald (Ossie) Morris

[…] Jemmy Dooley dear old Jones was still studio manager. And the famous Elkins brothers. They are both. Taffy Elkins and electrician. His brother was a carpenter and father was in the boiler house George who was the greatest chess draughts player that I've ever met. Nobody could ever beat Giorgio draf[…]

Peter Stroud

[…] Stroud: ...and finally finished up in Theatre Three with Eddie Carpenter. Jim Shields: Yes, yes... Peter Stroud: And he went […]

HP0202 Elizabeth Furse – Transcript

[…] practically is in film making. There's the mason, there's the carpenter, there's the electrician, there's the artist, there's the businessman, […]
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