[…] at another level, and discovered what we might call art cinema, where there was popular cinema. Before that = had […]
[…]ested in being out and about with my ponies. At the age of, when you think about it, it’s really strange, I mean I wasn’t really allowed to go to the cinema as a child, because they considered it infectious and amoral and not the place that children went to. We had little home movies, Mickey Mouse a[…]
[…] And also my mother used to take me to the cinema quite a lot. You know, in those days of […]
[…]u a script to work from, within a few days I had every part by heart. And I loved the theatre particularly. And also my mother used to take me to the cinema quite a lot. You know, in those days of course you were taken - things were considered to be right for a young person to go to. And I loved it.[…]
[…] you're not interested in anyway - we're talking about the cinema now. And anyway, about 1922 I suddenly got taken […]
[…] you're not interested in anyway - we're talking about the cinema now. And anyway, about 1922 I suddenly got taken […]
[…]st to get a decent echo was difficult. But to get any presence on vocals… eventually, as a real special favour, one studio, which was the Paris Cinema in Lower Regent Street, we actually had a Quad pre-amp where you could put top and bass lift on, which they called a pres… a presence uni[…]
[…]there was nothing of any great interest, outside of the troubles in Ireland, which I'm sure you're not interested in anyway - we're talking about the cinema now. And anyway, about 1922 I suddenly got taken down this - it was like a shed or an old shop - I saw these things moving on a screen, you kno[…]
[…]the youths brought up during the war, and of course immediately after the second war, the major form of entertainment in this country was in fact the cinema. Or the 'pictures' as we used to call it, cinema is a more recent and rather upmarket word. And I'd gone to the local polytechnic for a commerc[…]