Daphne Shadwell

[…] these pieces for them. Then, because of the broadcasting, the...[0:05:38]Let me ask a question, if I may, looking back with adult eyes to those headline acts of your childhood, would they get away with it now do you think? It was an age of great innocence, I think, in terms of material and per[…]

Philip Donnellan

[…]Sector nowadays?Philip Donnellan: [LAUGHTER] Yes that's right.Colin Moffat: Can you say a bit about that?Philip Donnellan: Yes.  My father was a head teacher, he got a head teachership in a little village school at a village, at a place called Merrow just outside Guildford where we lived from 1[…]

Paul Fox

[…]bit of that.  But it was…he was excellent, Ted, and, I mean, compared to Bob Danvers-Walker who was the other voice I knew, I mean, Ted was way ahead of that because he knew how to read it, he knew where to make the pauses, and he was exceptionally good, very…a very nice man.  Philip was g[…]

Bill Cotton

[…]is written inside. And inside was written this too will pass. And I suppose Itve t with Huw he actually identified something.And I always remember my headmaster at school t a man calledCross who was a clergyman who in the First World War had won the DSO t the MC t the Italian Croix de Guerre t theFr[…]

Charles Picken

[…] fee income which, without increasing the level of the fee, would provide a far bigger film hire budget to secure better product. Selling the idea to headmasters did not prove to be as big a hurdle as feared as the core concept of this ESFS would enable the various schools’ facilities to be used for[…]

James (Jimmy) Gilbert

[…]r father was Irish.Jimmy Gilbert: yes Huguenots, they came originally from Lyons, in France, they escaped to Ireland and his father was the Methodist head master so he was a Protestant teacher in a predominantly Catholic area in the west of Ireland.John Taylor: Where about, do you know.Jimmy Gilbert[…]

David Robson

[…] all jacked up. On Sunday morning we had Chief Engineer, Head of Department, somebody from personnel and a third person - fourth […]

David Robson

[…]could take the output of this, if this was a television camera, you could feed the output of this straight home." I was a long way, a long, long way ahead. Because that year - this was 1936, at the end of that year, the high definition service was started at Alexandra Palace and people were already […]
Scroll to Top