Charles Cooper

[…]rs but really I know very little about your early life. When were you born for instance, and where?Charles Cooper: Well I was born June 5th, 1910, in London. My parents actually came over from Russia, from the Ukraine - this would have been about 1893 and they were about twenty-two years of age and […]

Francis Gysin

[…]p;film. Where we were born into your parents. Yes quite well I was born in London of a Swiss father and a Scottish mother. I was educated at Highgate and&n[…]

Peter de Normanville

[…]y. So in fact, I decided to become a bomber pilot. 18 Yeah, we, we were when were you born? I was born in 1922. And where, where were you brought up? London very much cockney? Yeah.Alan Lawson  3:10  Sorry, anyway, sorry,Unknown Speaker  3:11  fine. My sort of next event in my RA[…]

BEHP 0721 T NORMAN J

[…] their cutting and all the post production was done in London. So when I was working with him which was […]

Norman Warren

[…]de. And, secondly all the shooting of those were done in Paris. They had a studio in France but their cutting and all the post production was done in London. So when I was working with him which was in Clarges Street in Mayfair, they had the cutting rooms in the basement. [TIME 00.14.59] S[…]

Rebecca O'Brien

[…]bsp;We'll get on to that in the near future. Okay, tell me when and where were you born?Speaker 1  1:21  I was born. In fact, I was born in London in 1957 at Hyde Park corner. There used to be a hospital there, which is now a poshMike Dick  1:33  hotel. Could you give me just for[…]

Harry Fowler

[…]a show called Me and My Girl which has been produced many times since, and it put Lambeth Walk on the map. Lambeth Walk was a very famous- typical of London – market streets, that were open until Saturday night at midnight, when eventually butcher’s shops and fish shops auctioned off, which was when[…]

Derek Threadgall

[…]Marriage in Dover court which is a mile away from Harwich. We were in many ways in the firing line from the German bombers. They were on their way to London and came over us and we were very much in the firing line. In fact on two occasions I was nearly my family were nearly wiped out. While I was w[…]

John Aldred

[…] coincided with mine. We were standing watching the Blitz on London and he said fantastic, this is much better than […]

Pat Jackson

[…] as Night Mail (1936), The Saving of Bill Blewitt (1936), London Can Take It (1940) and Patent Ductus Arteriosus (1947). […]
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