[…] war in the country and did not go back to London with my family until 1946. 00.53 The first film […]
[…] end up. Well, Tamara Howe, Darcus’s daughter, ended up at London Weekend Television, head of the drama documentary unit, sort of business […]
[…]will encode whatever we need it to be and they will distribute that as and when it needs to be. I: Right, and is that distributed centrally from London or somewhere? R: It's a Global CDN [Content Delivery Network] so it's a, I believe, an EU-based data, it will be an EU-based data centre t[…]
[…]nbsp;Okay, this is a British Entertainment History Project interview with Penny Woolcock. It's the 24th of April 2019. We're at Penny's home in north London.Camera's being operated by Nick Gilbey. Interviewer is Martin Spence. And the interview is copyright of the British Entertainment History Proje[…]
[…]use Oxford was considered a very safe place to be born at that time, but then I grew up for the rest of the war in the country and did not go back to London with my family until 1946.00.53 The first film I ever saw, strangely enough, was Nanook of the North which I saw quite soon after coming back t[…]
[…] earlier, I talked about how, always be nice to people because you never know where they’ll end up. Well, Tamara Howe, Darcus’s daughter, ended up at London Weekend Television, head of the drama documentary unit, sort of business side. And, she was fantastic, because, no, as far as I know, no other […]
[…]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[…]