Jill Craigie

[…] there is going to be a more collective society, a new kind of society, and second that that society is […]

Brian Pritchard

[…]y fluorescence where I was measuring coating weights, the amount of silver in various films, because obviously all the time they’re trying to develop new films. So they would produce samples at a testing coating track and I’d measure those samples to measure the silver. And I also used a bit of equi[…]

Jill Craigie

[…]tress, and she took a great interest in me. I was wallowing in Byron and Shelley and Keats, largely to find out about sex, to tell you the truth! We knew nothing whatever about it, but I knew they wrote a lot about love, and I thought I might learn something in this way. And I enjoyed the poetry. An[…]

Pat Jackson

[…]rland with my parents. Because my mother was a wonderful but totally dotty woman, who...John Legard: I remember your Mum, she used to come along to Pinewood didn't she?Pat Jackson: Yes, she was a wonderful really, she said, "Well, I've got children, I'm not going to leave them in prep school! They'l[…]

Gordon Hales

[…]mmitted suicide. I said he couldn't communicate with people he said just like that. But nobody was here. Such I thinkInterviewer  27:46  my new note sounds a little snap judgement allGordon Hales  27:49  Yes, indeed. Do you probably trying to get a setup walk backwards? backwards[…]

Keith Ewart

[…]ing. By the time they get to the fourth one, they've given up, indulged and spoiled? Well, yes, spoiled by My dear mother, of course, and and nobody knew, precious No, never did a day's work in my life.Roy Fowler  3:15  The origins are, it would seem to me, very comfortable English middle […]

Pat Jackson

[…] time as I was... John Legard: That was a very new school then? Pat Jackson: A very new school! And […]

Pat Jackson

[…] time as I was... John Legard: That was a very new school then? Pat Jackson: A very new school! And […]

Jonathan Balcon

[…] Polish Corridor because the Balcons were at the end of it!  Anyway, he, the family was a middle-class Birmingham family, my grandfather, who I knew quite well, Louis, was an extraordinary man who never really did a stroke of work all through his life. My grandmother I never knew, Mick's mother[…]

Gerry Fisher

[…]d up going home and I thought what am I now you know? And it wasn't I think until they put me to bed that night. Then I cried. Because it was then I knew I was back. Up until then I was scared stiff. I was back into the hospital again. No but very strong memories. What about schooling. schooling, I […]
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