Search Results for: Production Designer
John Krish
[…]nt there and I was told they'd moved to Denham. And I got the name of the woman who was responsible for employing people, who I was told was called a Production Manager. And being very cheeky, I went to Denham, and found myself confronted by police at the gate, very high security then - this would h[…]
Dennis Main Wilson
[…]and this is better than going to any university and to work with brains like that, absolutely incredible. And then I was given as a sort of a PA full production assistant to Marius Goring. Great actor, great writer, great broadcaster, who had recently as the war broke out, written and starred in thi[…]
William R Vicker
[…]of course, you you had to have a terrible lot of light to even illuminate the subject on that you see.Roy Fowler 35:20 But these were pre production tests. Were they the camera man assigned to a film would want to testSpeaker 1 35:27 out? Sometimes camera men were buying the […]
Muriel Cole
[…]ood to work with Hugh Alexander, who would publicity for 20th Century Fox, I enjoyed that enormously. But again, that ceased because 20th has stopped production. But through Fox, British, I heard I was introduced to Ernie Marlowe of Ealing studios, who employed me as his secretary, but failed to let[…]
Chris Kelly
[…]y when he got to an age of it, like Shirley Temple, the time came, you know, your time is up pal, actually, and he went to work on you know, became a production manager. And Julius the the other son, he died on location, funnily enough in Africa, as well. And it was the same sort of sad demise if yo[…]
Louise Willcox
[…]vidual award. They're always teams.Unknown Speaker 1:11 So yeah, in theory, I've got a BAFTA, but I don't physically have it. It's in the production office of spring watch. Okay. Yeah, I know that feeling is.Unknown Speaker 1:19 So just going right back to the beginning. Did […]
Clyde Jeavons
[…]hat we were over-selecting. It was over-rigorous and I came to a conclusion quite rapidly that it was important for every country to preserve its own production, irrespective of whether it was crap or not, and every country should preserve everything produced in its own country if it could. That was[…]
Peggy Gick
[…]d: God! It's a baptism of fire that, isn't it?Peggy Gick: God, it was a nightmare! But somehow we did get through. And it wasn't...we had a very nice production manager, whose name I forget...and it wasn't until the end of [the summer?] that he came to me and said, "by the way, how much experience h[…]
