Gerald Chambers

[…] P Hamilton  5:20  Oh, the industry is full of in great directors amongst others. And quite a lot of them most people like the narrow chief executive of London Weekend Television, who was only an editor at that time. But attending the meetings, is a very low life in the features department[…]

Gerry Fisher

[…]partment. JACK Cox, john Cox, john Cox, john Cox, john Cox. Cox was Karen, john john Cox had been involved with this with various what must have been executive meetings about how they would achieve this concept of shooting pitches in 13 days. And one of the things that john Cutts said was, Well, one[…]

Charles Bennett

[…]a show I was doing, with Carrol Naish. She was married to a highly important literary agent in London, and they gave a big dinner party for me and my executive producer - a delightful guy named Rudolph Flothow - and that kind of thing. And with them was this little woman - a Jewish lady - a delightf[…]

Dennis Main Wilson

[…]raight 40 years ago, The Goon Show started, this year. And 50 years ago this year, I joined the Beeb. There’s rumours, the story up in some great big executive meeting, programme meeting in Broadcasting House, somebody said, “Well what's all this about this ‘go on’ show. Anyway, we got on. It was wi[…]

Nancy Thomas

[…]assador and I transferred to the Head of Chancery, the First Secretary, who was sent to Italy, to Bari, to try and deal with SOE – Special Operations Executive – who were a bit out of hand and giving gold to all the wrong people, like the communists in Greece and the communists in Yugoslavia and eve[…]

Maurice Carter

[…]and down.Roy Fowler: Is that an aspect of the business that you've enjoyed, the living high,because certainly producers did it, the Rank Organisation executives did thatMaurice Carter: Yes, they sure did. No, I'm afraid we lived on the breadline mostly. Notreally on the breadline, I mean I've always[…]
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