[…]rt of disaster. I never heard the end of the story so I can't finish it, but she was a very, very nice woman. Professor Pizey was brilliant, a stills photographer. And, then we had Ernie Holding, who I think has already been, done his recording, but he was a very efficient, very efficient production[…]
BEHP transcript DisclaimerThis transcript has been produced automatically using Speechmatics.It provides a basic, but unverified or proofread transcript of the interview. Therefore, the British Entertainment History Project (BEHP) accepts no liability for any misinterpretation of the content of this[…]
BEHP transcript DisclaimerThis transcript has been produced automatically using Otter, https://get.otter.ai/interview-transcription/.It provides a basic, but unverified or proofread transcript of the interview. Therefore, the British Entertainment History Project (BEHP) accepts no liability for[…]
Rodney Giesler 0:09 This is an interview with Christopher miles, recorded for the BECTU oral history project by Rodney Giesler in Wiltshire on March the 31st 1995. Reel one,I mightask you when you were born, Christopher Miles 0:28 right, I was born 19, April 39, in Londo[…]
[…]n the early days also they would record an introduction to camera, their cameraman was Des Bartlett, who is now considered one of the finest wildlife photographers around. He was Australian and they met him in Australia when they were doing some cinema films, but he came to live in Nairobi with them[…]
[…] therefore into the family business which he never liked. He was never really a happy as a business man and always really behind it or wanted to be a photographer and therefore his hobby of photography was the most important thing in his life was actually more important to him than his work and beca[…]