[…] wrote and thanked him profusely. Also I only finally met David Lean at BAFTA about 6 months before he died. […]
[…] father - there were four children, I have a brother, David, and two sisters, and they were born by 1914. […]
[…]Of course, then, Pinewood closed. So, I’d already gone back to Pinewood, I was still with Carmen and we did Hotel Sahara in Monte Carlo and David Thomlinson and what’s his name, the actor who played the first Poirot. Who played the first Poirot? Peter Ustinov, and he was there and I can’t […]
[…] have to deal with the language.PF: So, moving on. So you worked Second Unit on Charge of the Light Brigade and some of the interviews with David Watkin mention certain techniques employed, that he wanted a different look between certain scenes shot in England and Russia, what part of the […]
[…] newspapers I think and various different things and one of them, whose name I remember clearly (I remember a lot of their names) but one of them was David Bell. Now, David Bell was a cameraman I'm pretty certain and then he became a Floor Manager and then he became a Director and then he went to an[…]
[…]you could feel a sort of, they weren’t happy.I: It was quite a glamorous film though, lots of international namesJK: Yes, they got everybody into it. David Niven was in it because I seem to remember it was David Niven who was stroking my arm and saying I do like a woman with soft skin.I: Probably Da[…]
[…]h were with Johnny Morris. We did two of those. In Africa I did quite a lot of the backup work for the Natural History programmes, working with, well David Attenborough was one that I did two series with, not as the wildlife photographer but doing all the links with them. Gerald Durrell was another […]
[…]t considerate person, not just gravity, which little girls see through that, too, it was just beautiful manners. And I remember saying years later to David Cecil in Oxford, you remind me so much of Puffin because he too had these beautiful and aristocratic manners, but I mean, Puffin was not an aris[…]
[…]ent’s shop quite abit, I used to serve there even when I was very small, we knew a lot of people and somebody who lived just down our road was called David Garner, and he was in fact – I left school at fifteen so it must have been 1956 – he was in fact, quote unquote, the editor […]
[…]where I lived for many years. And whilst I was at school I was, as I say, dragged into these shows, and I played the young Oliver Twist and the young David Copperfield. And we used, the most remarkable thing was we used to go round to, I didn't get any money for this, they went round to various, the[…]