Kenneth Griffith

[…]r. Flinn was an officer of the Royal Irish Constabulary. And I've also deduced, but never proved it, that a very dear friend of mine, a great Irish Republican leader of the Irish Republican Army, Commander [?] General Thomas Barry, almost certainly gave the orders for Flynn's house to be burnt down.[…]

Frances Cockburn

[…] time. a certain amount of time was was given as a sort of goodwill gesture also because I think they didn't sell all the advertising space and so on public service themes you fill us with a nice This was one of my tasks I seem to be involved with more fillers there anything else. Then we went to ma[…]

Norman Swallow

[…];Robert Reidseemed to me able to talk on the part of the viewer the people, the publicrather, he wasn't an academic he didn't pretend to be. He wasn't an expert buth[…]

Norman Fisher

[…]ff, a tremendous amount of football. This was important for distribution purposes because exhibitors reckoned football was the stuff that brought the public in and in certain areas it was, so you were often going off to do the local football matches which was simply to please the one particular exhi[…]

Joy Batchelor

[…]sed. And some of us, and I was one of us, said you know, this is all wrong. We're not getting any coverage, any exposure. All the cameras and all the publicity is in the main thing, and they're photographing Gina Lollobrigida and even Pablo Picasso [laughs] but nobody's doing anything about animatio[…]

Cyril Howard

[…]p;buy     of Panavis ion . CH:  You've got to remember they're a private firm, not a public company. They went public in 86 because I bought some stock for old time sake.    &[…]

Peter Proud

[…]p;I chose to go to Dulwich. I thought it would begood for business to be a public school boy. I had learned what that meantalready, you know.What age were you&n[…]
Scroll to Top