Derek Threadgall

[…]the cinema. The magic of the beam of light coming out you couldn't see where it came from but I knew that when I after seeing a few films I turned my head to try and find out where that being came from. I was hooked. I think it has also to do with the fact that at that time of course throughout the […]

Alf Cooper

[…]th a cardboard tray in their lap.1Begging for money?And matches, matches and boot laces.Yes.And people are proud of Poppy Day. They should hide their head in shame.I quite agree with you.That’s my opinion of that.I quite agree with you.And that was the aftermath of the war, the Great War when they w[…]

Tilly Day

[…]anyway, I got the full treatment...Sidney Cole: Jolly good.Tilly Day: ...it was wonderful! Wonderful tour for me.Sidney Cole: Leaping ahead a bit Tilly, you were in the ATS during the war, weren't you? Which was a different experience, tell us something about that.Tilly Day: Well[…]

Harry Miller

[…]d helped to mix and all that and when it got to the dubbing stage, which was about two channels, I can always remember going up and loading one sound head, because the other one was on the projector, sticking a couple of records on a thing, dashing down the stairs, tearing up the stairs to the mixer[…]

Tilly Day

[…] a long, beautiful table, Martita Hunt was sitting at the head of the table, and I was being 'voice-off', sitting […]

Russell Galbraith

[…]course, is that it meant that something that was terribly complicated in its way, say filmicly, could be shot by a camera man but if it was a talking head that was gonna run for five minutes, it needed a cameraman, an assistant cameraman, a director, a production assistant, perhaps an electrician, e[…]

Interview

[…] the ambulance with this poor man. And the smell of burnt flesh was horrible. But the point was he was such a jolly character that he was he was lightheaded with pain and he was saying, Norman there's a race at 230 at so and so and so and so you must back the so and so and so and so. And when we got[…]

Sue (Susan) Crockford

[…] fact some of the apparently leftie people like Kettle weren’t as inspiring as one would...SF: No, no. Was that the period when Arnold Kettle was the head of the English Department?Yes, yes.SF: Because he was a pal of ours obviously.He might have been a pal, he wasn’t that friendly to all of us lowl[…]
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