[…] and sitting in it myself. RF: The War was a catalyst for change. It had an effect on career structures? […]
[…] juicing directors ended up in the red line became alcoholics which was very sad because he would he would try and get them going.SPEAKER: M6He was a catalyst. But you never knew exactly knew where you were with Michael. What was his attitude towards like ACTU as it was in those days. I mean was he.[…]
[…] 26:07But sort of saying that you couldn't get the actual stars at all. For instance, I made a note to the people in poets pub, and it's a marvellous catalyst to Derrick bond, Rhona Anderson, James Robertson, just this. Barbara Murray Fabian. Great. Maurice Denham after low Antony steel, that's not […]
[…] do theatre studies? !ED: Yes, I met, the real actual catalyst was Henry V. I remember, to this day, when […]
[…]for 3 years and she was actually running the department thenI: Can I ask how you came to do theatre studies?ED: Yes, I met, the real actual catalyst was Henry V. I remember, to this day, when I first saw that. It was just after the war, a few weeks before the end of the war. I think I[…]
[…] look around Russia theatre and you see masses of secretaries and everybody which is great it encourages encourages interest. But on the other hand a catalyst like and take a breath or Oh, I get quite often put the put a doubt into a director's mind. And I think the old system was very good I mean n[…]
[…]. RL: So, there's a huge tranche of additional work. GM: Huge tranche, no extra staff, etc. And then I said … I can't remember what was the catalyst of this. I think it must have been illnesses or something else. But Paul Bromley was off again, and I'm saying, “Listen, the membership is gr[…]
[…] were. It was no good putting dyes in them. The catalyst experiments were fun. You have an apparently calm liquid […]
[…]d Pernis refinery in Rotterdam. And discussed things with Martin Rogers, who in turn devised some bench top experiments for us to do, particularly on catalysts, to illustrate chemical properties. Eventually we shot them. We went to refineries at Ingolstadt near Munich, and at Strasbourg. And that wa[…]
[…]too, don’t they (yes) they’re paid extremely well.SAMUELSON: Ye, yes, yes. So er, er, er, um we, we had to, w we had to close Holland (cough) and the catalyst of closing it was there was ....... a major robbery. There was a break in and we were cleaned out ............ n, now how can I put it. Of al[…]