[…]y somehow. Then in my recent years- I worked in Dublin before the war. When I came back to England, it was wartime, and there were no Irish actors in London. I did so much work with Irish accents on radio, and it wasn’t (oddly enough) ‘til sometime after that, that I got a lot of Scottish parts, whi[…]
[…] so I gave her a lift home, a lift into London. And we started chatting and it seemed as though […]
[…]hat you basically grew up in highway.Simon Rose 9:14 Yeah, I was there to like, even after I started work, I was commuting from Africa to London.Ian Noah 9:23 serve as a highway from school.Simon Rose 9:26 Yes, I went to my schools. Well, I went to the private pri[…]
[…]er believed me. So I did. I passed my Intermediate the first time, the final proved more difficult as it often was. And I went on a crammer course in London. And eventually I got, I think on the second take. So I now was qualified, about 21 or 22. And now I had to do National Service because it's be[…]
[…]n the Monday, on the Friday a personal who was assistant dubbing mixer at ABPC called Hugh Strain had left ABPC to open up Warwick Dubbing Theatre in London and the Sound Chief at ABPC Tony Lumpkin was now looking for an effects mixer for the theatre. He heard as the grapevine goes very quickl[…]
[…] you know who he did it with?Unknown Speaker 2:14 I believe it could have been EdwardsUnknown Speaker 2:19 in the East End of London,Unknown Speaker 2:24 was a tool maker, yes, yes, yes. But I, you know, I wouldn't be sure of that. I do know that he was a lifelong[…]
[…]ful little dairy called the Brockhurst dairy. So my earliest times were being bathed in a tin bath, at the top of this little Brockhurst dairy on the London Road, now a tattoo parlour, and all the milk groundsmen, when my mum remembered, all the milk groundsman whistling as they came through. And me[…]