[…]th Kensington, he had quite a good commercial business in the sense that he did a lot of photographic work for catalogs for clothes, for hats for stockings, for goodness knows what. But the thing that he really liked, and loved more than anything else was photographing beautiful women, which he did […]
[…]site theUnknown Speaker 1:21 prison.Dudley Lovell 1:22 And that's a good school acts as a secondary school. It is a branch of King's College. when when when did you lose school? I left school at 16. I've taken I'd taken in those days. We used to have matriculation of general […]
[…]on in mathematics, they sort of decided that I should become articled to a chartered accountant and that's what I did at 15 which is extraordinary looking back so I was articled to a firm in Salisbury called Fawcett, Brown and Pinniger and I did: in those days there wasn't a unit, wasn't a degree co[…]
[…]nd Guilds and past, I think, or something or other. However, come 19, 1935 this was 1932. Come 1935 and 1935 there was an internal memo came round seeking volunteers to join the experimental television service at Alexandra Palace. And I read this memo. I was now 19 I read this memo, and I said, that[…]
[…]te a long experience of her.EC: Oh yes. Because we used to live with her during the War.SC: Oh, did you, where would that have been?EC: It was in 215 King's Road, Chelsea. Mother acted as Grannie's companion, do all the odd jobs, you know.SC: She was no longer playing then was she?EC: Oh yes. In var[…]
[…]rcle. I mean I started one of nine Wall Street in the industry. I'm now working at one on one Wall Street just next door. So I seem to have gone […]
[…]wrence hunting was directing. There was a friend of my mother. My mother, at that time was a friend of the young actor who died during the war one working on next of kin, a man called Dickie Norris. And in those days, if I remember right, I think even Freddie Young was working somewhere out there at[…]
[…] Elizabethanwhich was a steam train which went non stop from Kings Cross to Edinburgh. And it was like the crack […]
[…] would that have been? Edward Carrick: It was in 215 King's Road, Chelsea. Mother acted as Grannie's companion, do all […]
[…]ble time it always seemed to me to be the time of privation but probably it wasn’t because we ate well at school and such like.So I had this place at Kings’ College and I read somewhere that Charles Chaplin was going to go to Switzerland for a, this was before he was flung out of the States, for a c[…]