[…]s Men crisis is interesting. I did that election, the election when Wilson lost. I was a Producer of that election with Dick Francis as a Director. And there was no doubt the relationship between Harold Wilson and the BBC had soured, and it had soured to some extent, I suppose, I m[…]
[…] any other director, not even Hitchcock, who could would be superior, or even David Lean, who I think is one of the English might say visual masters, Director. It's not only clever with his artist, but he's also very clever from the visual side. That's why whoever, because I worked with David Lean w[…]
[…] great sense of humour. He was very efficient as a director. He d idn't hang about. In fact he was always […]
[…]n P will put me right.JPH: Your parents were living in Wandsworth.DS: Oh yes, yes. Because my father was Charles Shadwell, a musician, a musical director. He was MD Musical Director at the Putney Hippodrome at that time, so that’s why I was born in that area. But shortly after that, I thin[…]
[…]ort of films.’ Or ‘I don’t want him because he’s,’ you know, this.
Mhm.
But, I don’t think I’ve come across...
Well the ambition was to be a director. What happened there, did you abandon it, or did it abandon you?
I abandoned it really. I could have been a director. I could be a directo[…]
[…]gates Come on. How good are the habits abroad? What stands out in my mind there was that was my start of my association with Ken and again, yeah, the director. He came from the bush having just made holiday camp. He, I think, was it realist? Madden Park. That's it come from baton park with with Sydn[…]
[…]anotherday.Roy Fowler: What did the Department comprise and how did it operate, he was the headof the art departmentMaurice Carter: Vetch was the art director. There was a guy called because Gus Kochswho was his assistant who had come from the same direction as I had in decoration, Ithink he came fr[…]
[…]the producer decide to help me with the opening shots of the films which he Charles work with Charles Craig and sorry as Chas Charles Grant who's the director.SPEAKER: M6Yes yes yes yes. Now famous for a fish called Wanda which he made when he was about 80. Yeah right. Still with us still with us an[…]
[…] of 6 Anthony Asquith (1902 -1969) was a British film director. His directorial credits include The Browning Version (1951), The Way […]
[…] going on between the leading man and the man in the other film and we were all engaged as sort of
6 Anthony Asquith (1902-1969) was a British film director. His directorial credits include The Browning Version (1951), The Way to the Stars (1945) and Pygmalion (1938).7 A. V Bramble (1887-1963) was[…]