[…]llow countrymen and women were very prominent. Did Grierson have many connections withthe union? I can’t ...A He wasn’t a member. He was made an Honorary Member, he was never a member.Q What was the reason for this?A I have no idea because he is not anti-trade union, you know, John his brother […]
[…]ing as a technician. It’s a mixture of things. I’m immensely proud of having been president of the union for a brief while and very proud of being an honorary member of the union, I’m very proud of various films I’ve worked on in some capacity or other when I feel I’ve done a good job on them, films[…]
[…] services to the U.K. film industry: He was also an Honorary Life Member of BECTU; a Fellow of the BFI; […]
[…] members on this issue are welcomed . The concept of Honorary Membership of the British Entertainment History Project creating a […]
[…] Not at all I think I was too young and of course since then I've learnt a lot about the […]
[…] that time, but then I grew up for the rest of the war in the country and did not go […]
[…] a free state when I was born. It's now part of Poland and called Gdansk, but in my day it […]
Sheelagh Reece DRAFT. Tape 1 Side A 1 This%recording%was%transcribed%by%funds%from%the%AHRC9funded%‘History% of%Women%in%British%Film%and%Television%project,%193391989’,%led%by%Dr%Melanie%Bell%(Principal%Investigator,%University%of%Leeds)%and%Dr%Vicky%Ball%(Co9Investigator,%De%Montfort%University).%(2015).% BECTU History Project Interview no: 249 Interviewee: Sheelagh Rees Interviewer: […]
[…] advertising films before moving into documentary production. By the end of the decade he had become a lighting cameraman and […]
[…] (1932). He was assembly cutter on Basil Dean’s 1932 adaptation of The Constant Nymph, and his first film as Editor […]