[…]ke that. And it was, it was a good draw, and orchestras, like doing it, and it was good for your got his concept. Got some constant giving in and the officers of course, confirmed their relationship with him in a sense, you know, and that was good. And that leads me on to say that, of course, the on[…]
[…]t. I saw an advertisement in the paper for. An office boy or Junius junior officers system wanted for National Screen services and I saw them that obviously the[…]
[…] (1940). He returned to Britain for his directorial debut, Madness of the Heart (1949), but spent the rest of his […]
[…] ammunition, so you'd got lines to say! [laughter] So the officer who's going to fire it would say something about, […]
[…] lengthy interview, Jackson talks to John Legard about his memories of the British documentary movement, the atmosphere and personalities of […]
[…] lengthy interview, Jackson talks to John Legard about his memories of the British documentary movement, the atmosphere and personalities of […]
[…] it was very good to have say… If, if you were doing your 8 for dinner at night, I would get a very big variety of people, but definitely a couple of officers. And it was all, generally the generals who sorted things out over the 14:00 dinner. I mean it was very funny. But they took comm[…]
[…]ping the name going. But now the conservatives said cut it finished. What so there we were Dennis foreman, Dennis foreman was a so called controlling officer in those days at the COI. And with the structure of the ground filming it was that the COI acted as a kind of advertising agency. And our actu[…]
[…] But when he in the film when no card as the as the captain of the destroyer is picked up, covered in oil and seen on on another destroyer. I was the officer that met him on deck you can see me to this day in that film in which we serve. They had to put a little bit on because they had a moustache. […]