Philip Donnellan

[…] of pondering about the central problems of the, of the issue between England and Ireland I thought well sooner or later i'm going to have to come to grips with the central issue which is about the army.  Philip Donnellan  34:37  Now I had been, I had been extremely interested in in t[…]

Donald Wilson

[…]I always got along fine with him. But they were a great show of a badger he made worse. auger marks it used to be attributed to punch his name in the grip America several sub goals. But Joe did all that he really did do it. And the most famous this is going on too long as I go into the kind of yes, […]

David Attenborough

[…]obably the brightness of the lights, you know, and deftly preventing this thing from biting his hand off by holding it by the genitals in a very firm grip. And that was a terrific programme because, it was the first time you'd seen a wombat. Also they escaped and they bit him and they peed down his […]

Leonard (Len) Harris

[…]is, you know - and the plates were there, they were just railway scenes or something, and going into a station or something like that. And I got our 'Grip' Honeybeard[?] to sit in as a passenger in the train and I arranged some lights and shot the thing. And because of the physical circumstances, an[…]

Pat Jackson

[…]...it was a common sense approach. He hadn't got the time or the money to waste on people who were going to flounder it...who couldn't really come to grips with the subject, and he felt that somebody who had sat down for four years and taken a degree, at least had a disciplined mind, which is what h[…]

Nancy Thomas

[…]was talking to him, and Marcel, looking as he always did, like an icon, was sitting there making the most extraordinary statements. Suddenly I felt a grip on my arm and I turned round and there was Huw, and he said, ‘Who’s that?’ ‘Marcel Duchamp’. And he said, ‘But he’s wonderful!’ And I said, ‘I to[…]

Brian Shemmings

[…]bsp;On camera they are the fifth personnel the camera crew to leaving aside the grip. I mean they would be the fifth person on the camera. I mean there is&[…]

Margaret Thomson

[…]the conditions of war it might be the only anaesthetic available to a non-qualified doctor, to an ambulance driver or somebody who could stand by and grip the ether onto the mask over a patient's face while the doctor did what he had ever he had to do. So we made this film. And we staged a lot of it[…]

Elaine Schreyeck

[…] too interested in what they were seeing.12Elaine Schreyeck Tape 1 Side AWell I think that's true what you've just said, that if the film is not very gripping as a story...Yes.Or entertainment.Yes.You then...Then you start picking up, you see.You can get, you can get some interest out of it by...Qui[…]

Kitty Wood (Morrison)

[…] and the electricians and so on, said, "Oh fancy having a continuity girl - no watch," and all this sort of thing. [Chuckling] And in fact one of the grips was a great deal of help to me, he told me roughly what I should be doing and what I should be looking for![JC laughs]Kitty Wood : I had an idea[…]
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