Norman Swallow

[…]bsp;           We dealt with whatever you liked, agriculture, UNESCO, FAO, ILO, International LabourOrganisation, WHO, World Health. Each was about the work done by that agency and we got material all[…]

Dicky Leeman

[…] British, and the other - I don't mean British by nationality but British music hall performer - and Harry Langdon […]

Jill Langley

[…]ee years there, three are very happy, very, very happiest. And it was really kind of before its time, because it was very multicultural, all sorts of nationalities there. Pretty well, all men, I think, are the architects. Delightful people very interesting. And I know we had day trips to properties,[…]

Taylor Downing

[…] Thames as a commercial operation saw very foresightedly , with great foresight, that this was an opportunity to buy programming that would have international appeal: that would stay on the shelf. And, of course, The World at War was the absolute classic…about which recently – or a few years ago – I[…]

Joy Cuff (née Seddon)

[…] that when I was about 12 so I was really quite impressed with that. And then I used to love the impressionists because my dad used to take me to the National Gallery. 0:03:07.1 MIKE: Where did you go to art school then? 0:03:09.1 JOY: Well yes, but this is back about 1957. There was somet[…]

Dicky Leeman

[…] was fantastic to hear these two guys talking about the early days, you know? One was Australian but British, and the other - I don't mean British by nationality but British music hall performer - and Harry Langdon the old time comic.Rodney Giesler: And of course he was vaudeville, wasn't he, before[…]

John Hogarth

[…]ree-quarters were owned by individuals.Rodney Giesler : As many as that?John Hogarth : Oh yes, amazing, people nowadays thinking of Odeon and MGM and National Amusements and so on - chains of cinemas. The independent is very much the rarity. But in those days the majority of cinemas were independent[…]
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