[…] seen the digital impact on Cinema, with the loss of Projectionist jobs and the subsequent impact on our screens with […]
[…] a DCP. = hadn’t actually got the right one, the projectionist wouldn’t let me take it, bu t yeah, = […]
[…] studio in the daytime, you know. So I was relief projectionist and part-time manager - stand out the front, you […]
[…] be done every day, but from time to time, the projectionist could run the open gate projector at the white […]
[…] that the ETU wanted to have all ETU members as projectionists throughout the country. It was easy enough to organise, […]
[…] the post-war era, Ossie began his career working as a projectionist during his school holidays. In 1932, he left school […]
[…] thought of actually making films at that time. But one of the uncles who had been visited on us for a while he had before the war he'd been a cinema projectionist. And although he would, had been sort of drifted into unison's work, he had managed to get permission to leave that and become one of th[…]
[…]creenings and we had effectively a monthly programme and we ran that program daily and over each weekend as well. It was non-stop. We had -we had two projectionists which meant that they could alternate weekends and have days off. We also had a small preview theatre which enabled us to screen films […]