[…]it into into a job within the six months. And they found me a job on a small farm in the in the local district of Glen Innes that was in the north of New South Wales. And I think it was about 200 acre farm and it grew a bit of this and a bit of that and, and, and, and that was owned by a man who is […]
[…] mean my father did a white collar job and so money was quite limited and I think it was, they had, I mean I think my mother had great conflict, she knew North London had been avery good school and she wanted her daughter to go to a very good school but I don’tthink she realised the implications of […]
[…]y Lou and I left Eastern? in an air raid and took the train to Glasgow, and got on a ship called the Cameroonian which was in convoy with evacuees to New York, and took us 10 days to get to New York with outsight of land. It was actually torpedoed and sunk on its return journey.Alan Lawson &nb[…]
[…]ot to the cinema every week; very little of his early life had anything to do with his career in the film industry, when he left the army in 1947 he knew he didn’t want to work in an office; Southern Rail had a small film unit for training under Waterloo which worked outside the union until the rail[…]
[…]sp;jobs until 10:00 at night and went home. It was interesting because. If you knew nothing about photography I'd never take the picture in my life. You know yo[…]
[…]like a good many people in the sixties, when television was really starting out, in the whole of the UK really, as much as in Scotland, I had been in newspapers. I started out in newspapers. I started out in the old Kemsley chain who had a lot of newspapers in Scotland and they were eventually bough[…]
[…]lot of the pictures.EB: Well it was a special treat for me on a Sunday night, to go and see, but Father was offered a job in a very tough district in New North Road, where they objected so much to the pianist that they threw a bottle on his head, and he was in hospital.SC: Why did they do that?EB: W[…]
[…] demonstrate how women became essential to Britain’s cinema culture in new ways during the war. Usually employed in picture houses […]
[…]programme engineer up in in Bangor. And he lived not far from me at Penmaenmawr, and it started at Penmaenmawr the bus and it had a timetable so you knew and it was timed with certain shows. We got there for the call for ITMA and the band of course, the review orchestra were in Llanfairfechan. […]