[…] there right till the time I left to go to ITN. Well, Dorte was still there, but Dorte left about […]
[…]as it Dorte or Cox? Or...Cyril Page: [interrupts] Oh, Cox! Harold Cox. Oh yes, Harold Cox. Yes, yes. He was there right till the time I left to go to ITN. Well, Dorte was still there, but Dorte left about a couple of weeks before...er I did, because he went to start ITN up...Alan Lawson: [interrupts[…]
[…]bsp; And he flatly refused to talk to the BBC. Flatly refused to speak to his friend John Morgan. What was worse, he gave an interview to ITN. ITN did not have the facilities on the train. ITN threw the tape out at Crewe Station and got the interview on the air before we did.[…]
[…]at was pretty much an independent project. Because before then she’d also worked with Stephen Peet [BEHP Interview No 163] at the BBC on Yesterday’s Witness, so she had a good production record and as you say she’d been a senior player in the National Film Archive at the BFI for some time. I think s[…]
[…] is a useful resource on film and television productions, incuding crews and talent. ITN 1955 Club Site dedicated to memories of the spirit […]
[…]he BBC. That was the kind of trade-off so everybody that was good anywhere else in the industry very quickly ended up coming into ITV, BBC, well ITV, ITN, STV and, you know, the independent broadcasters. So, yeah, it was amazing! You suddenly thought, Wow! The people in here are...I'm kind of lucky […]
[…] of the garden and she came down, she said, " ITN's on the 'phone, they want to talk to you." […]
[…] of the garden and she came down, she said, " ITN's on the 'phone, they want to talk to you." […]
[…]the longest I'd ever had, you know. And my mother-in-law was alive at that time. I was down at the bottom of the garden and she came down, she said, "ITN's on the 'phone, they want to talk to you." So I went in, they said, "Hello, this is Roy Colwell[?] at ITN. Can you do a day's work for us tomorro[…]