[…]hopefully we were getting more and more people interested either too. We had no exhibition of AIDS for disabled people. AIDS awareness campaigns you know. And PCOS w[…]
[…] trying to effect always a better standard.Sidney Cole: And of course in relation to this, it was an extension of that approach that made you go into exhibition as well as distribution.Charles Cooper: Yes, yes.Sidney Cole: Could you tell me something about that?Charles Cooper: Yes, well we thought w[…]
[…]spective. And that is why, I suppose, when one thinks about this with hindsight, I might have been tipped to something which was more it's a bit more exhibition, bit more extrovert, toRoy Fowler 22:50 compensate, maybe aSpeaker 1 22:53 compensation. These things obviously not[…]
[…]ing]Roy Fowler: It must have been a very tinny, peculiar sound?Eddie Dryhurst: Rather tinny yeah, inevitably.Roy Fowler: What else do you remember of exhibition in those days?Eddie Dryhurst: Exhibition?Roy Fowler: Yes, how a cinema was run. Was there any element, as you saw it, of professionalism in[…]
[…] National Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh is mounting an exhibition, Ray Harryhausen: Titan of Cinema. The exhibits include storyboards, […]
[…] that on the spot I said ‘Okay, I’ll organise an exhibition I’ll be part of’. We were, we just set […]
[…] cinema in the 1930s, and the changes that occurred in exhibition during the post war era. His assessment of John […]
[…] ‘show it!’[50] For all these frustrations, it seems that the exhibitionist tendencies and higher (Hollywood- backed) budgets of British cinema […]
[…] put some models in reception at Alexandra Palace, the area that was underneath the antenna or the mast. And he wants to talk to you. He's running an exhibition. Jerry's posture he goes around. I follow as an assistant. Jerry is introduced to this Mr. Clark, and his Geryon has been like bit like Wim[…]