Jean Anderson

[…]rticularly with the arts) if you switch from one to the other, it’s never a complete loss. You know; sometimes I hear parents complaining about their children switching from this and that when they’re young, and I think when you’re young, it doesn’t awfully matter because I think you should gain som[…]

Phyllis Dalton

[…]o?My father worked for GWR in the great days of GWR. [laughter]God’s Wonderful Railway.Absolutely, yes, yes.And can you tell me a bit about your childhood and how you came to be interested in thekind of...Well, it was... we certainly weren’t well off with somebody working on the railway, andmy […]

Gordon McCallum

[…] time. But it went very quickly and the funny thing is that I didn't think I was getting old. I mean when I started in the business I was virtually a child and everybody was youthful and my thoughts were youthful about the whole job. I was enthusiastic and I didn't see the passing years really, at a[…]

Gordon McCallum

[…] when I started in the business I was virtually a child and everybody was youthful and my thoughts were youthful […]

Bernard Gribble

[…]all right. Rusty say. I'm not sure Ralph looks like he can get it. But anyway finally one day we were looking some of these rushes and as you do with children and animals there was a horse in the scene and you don't put a board in the beginning in case you frighten the horse so you you shoot the sho[…]

Robert M (Bob) Angell

[…]family moved out to Gerrards cross in backs. And at the age of seven, I went away to prep school in Sussex, the normal sort of thing for middle class child of those days and went on to public school at more bruh where I stayed until 1938. What did your father do? But my father was an architect. And […]

Charles Crichton

[…]hat were you doing at Maidenhead.CC: It was supposed to be an advanced school, father sent me down there.SC: It was a boarding school.CC: And my grandchildren are there actually. It’s perfectly alright now. But he, the headmaster, was found with his car upside down in a ditch with whisky, so he ran […]

Jill Langley

[…]at what we called the bumps or, or the feet of the hills. And it was just a bit of rough ground really. Were outside a lot. Because people work their children were much more outside in those days. And I remember the schools I remember going to school. That's a bit later when I was five.Unknown Speak[…]

Ron Moody

[…]s. And Richard the Third I did with him in Canada. Joyce Robinson  8:54  We mustn't forget them, because we're still in your childhood. Yes, did you go to a Jewish school? No, no. Ron Moody  9:02  And my parents were very English in a funny sort of w[…]
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