[…] -up, I was lost. In third play I was playing head boy at school, gets drunk in Act 1, sleeps […]
[…]got into St Paul’s School in London, so it meant going up and down on the train. Which was quite a trek. DB: What ambitions formed in your young head at that time? PB-C: Well it was interesting, because my father was very keen, because after he left the War Office, he joined the Foreign Of[…]
[…]to Manchester to stand in for the FOM there for a year, which I did, Graham Turner. And then coming back to Bristol, the job became vacant. Cyril Morehead became the FOM. I became the Assistant FOM and was with him for three weeks when I was drafted as a FOM to Pebble Mill. From there, Film Un[…]
[…]ody great camera. Ronald Neame 18:50 It was a great camera. And when I there was there came a time, but we'd have to jump ahead for that. That came a time when I took over the business after he was killed. And of course, the camera was one that you got onto the back cloth.[…]
[…]they opened it up we didn’t get any sleep from about 1935 onwards. But further up the road was this nice Deansfield Road school. I remember well, the Headmaster's name was Dixon. I remember him because his birthday was the same day as mine and we used to celebrate together. very kind to a little boy[…]
[…]bsp;said Now you're just going to see Eric bomber Eric Palmer. His partner was ahead of you fine bird it was a very important man. You ran away from Hitler[…]
[…]alled It is Midnight Dr Schweitzer. And I was hired for that, in the middle of my preparations I was called to Cecil McGivern,Norman Swallow: Who was head of programmesRudi Cartier: Who was god, and he said would you like to be in a permanent job with us. And I said certainly, And I was glad to be i[…]
[…]y ten years after they had been engaged and he went to LorettoSchool as a Chaplain. The whole family went through Loretto School, one of my Uncles wasHeadmaster and the Loretto ethic was very deeply embedded in the family. My Father was mildlyclerical during his school period. After that not so much[…]
[…] lot of shepherding, Tom Quiggley, and his son was the head horse keeper. There were in those days eight men […]
[…]d. That's 1939. I went in 1939 19. I think I went in 1940 early 1940 the war just started and the other important thing for me was that thank God the headmaster of my prep school I went to a prep school called Neville Holt which was near market harbour. An absolutely ideal spot totally isolated from[…]