[…]merican, you know, and he worked on on films. You know, in the early days, it was sort of an odd jobs man is to carry the camera about and do bits of crowd work and stuff like that. Because in those days, we used to get about two months. vacations we called it from school. And he used to take […]
[…]in that way, a most superior kind of script of its kind.
Mm.
But it was a little bit stagey, you know. I mean there again, we never had a large crowd, you know, we never had 5,000 when 2,000 would do, and things like that, and they were always cutting off corners there. But I don’t think it no[…]
[…] was. Then I came again on one of these LMG defence corps as a projectionist mainly, showing films, secret films to them. And they were a pretty nice crowd actually, they had some very decent officers there. A lot of them were titled men, very wealthy all of them, as Guard's Officers often are you k[…]
[…]her it was Paramount or something like that. And they used to make silent films round there, and occasionally they would enlist some local people for crowd scenes, everybody would be in it from round about you see, and there would be comings and goings of these people going into this studio.Well my […]
[…] you to catch a cold and one had to do this about calling artists on the set. Sometimes you even go down to the telephone room to call the crowd artists on to the set because they had a the microphone there he could speak up to the up to the dressing rooms and up to the canteen. And every[…]
[…] lot about photography. It intrigued me, and I liked it. And working for a newspaper, you were independent, you could have a ball, and they were good crowd of peopleRoy Fowler 2:48 that was a local newspaper, bed for chair times.Speaker 1 2:56 Then I was unfortunately, I had […]
[…] secret films to them. And they were a pretty nice crowd actually, they had some very decent officers there. A […]
[…] there, and occasionally they would enlist some local people for crowd scenes, everybody would be in it from round about […]
[…] independent, you could have a ball, they were a good crowd of people. First job at a newspaper 0:02:48 RF: […]
[…] it was called then in Cambridge, called the Festival Theatre. I was engaged as assistant stage manager and understudying the leads, going on in many crowd scenes and small parts, and quite a cast. Flora Robson was the leading lady, Tony Guthrie was the young director, and Robert Donat w[…]