[…] I was part of the team, the photograph the king in Buckingham Palace. And that's another little point to what was there before, but that was for the cinema. It was May the eighth, we went there on May the eighth, or this. This is the end of the war. This is the end of the war in Europe. And we had […]
[…]35 No, I was never a sports whenever interested in sport to any great degree. I did play a bit but not not wasn't. The film, always film in the cinema attracted me. We used to have a cinema in Uxbridge with four cinemas Actually, I should say. And the Regal was the one that attracted me most. […]
[…] a lot of international film politics were involved at that stage, it had to do with the “Quota act” [minimal cost films made to comply with the 1927 Cinematograph Films Act].RF: What was Ted Black's strength as a producer.VG: His strength was, he knew his business, he knew what he wanted, he knew w[…]
[…] of. I suppose he must have probably been to a cinema in Glasgow but as far as knowing public taste […]
[…]th an employment card from Suffolk County Council, which I was duly got, and I did a paper round for WH Smith. But then I always had this love of the cinema, and I used to wander around Bury St Edmunds. There were three cinemas at the time, on a Saturday afternoon and one one Saturday, I decided to […]
[…]ed to be very, very involved in light entertainment and have been all my life, have been interested in that side of the business. I used to go to the cinema about twice a week at school, I used to keep copious notes of all the films I'd see. And the ideal Saturday for me when I was about 12 or 13, I[…]
[…] into costume design as a professional endeavour in post-war British cinema, and shedding light on a whole cohort of ‘girls […]
[…]diaryUnknown Speaker 4:36 interpolate into matches where film orientated union to some degree. I mean the history project. They played in cinemas video notUnknown Speaker 4:47 a cinema. Yes. That was another fund.Unknown Speaker 4:52 That was for money.Unknown Spe[…]
[…]ll BIP films was called Wardour Films and they had actually an office in Wardour Street. And they were responsible for booking the things for all the cinemas outside the ABC circuit. And Robert Clark, who was also a Scottish lawyer, was in charge of all the sort of Wardour Films and anything outside[…]
[…]s, and we made the tour all over again in 3738 and in 3839Speaker 3 30:36 but near enough Powell was that it was the introduction the two cinema coaches, additional cinema coaches, especially unlike mine, in which instructional films were shown in the coach to the staffUnknown Speaker &n[…]