[…]ndon with a Cable and Wireless company making telephone cable, basically. But I we had no, no hook up with with BBC, we listen to it. Listen to it on radio every, every day, basically. And when I was three and a half, the war started and and that part of London, they decided, in all the children had[…]
[…]hortly after that, and I spent most of my time on weird location I went up to a Berlin during the very first airliftas a second lieutenant and set up radio communications back from Berlin with computers and the some of the very first of the elementary computers and the teleprinters. And so I was run[…]
[…]itting back and being a wife and mother? DM: No, never. SC: Always working? DM: Always working. I did a lot of BBC work then. SC: Radio? DM: Yes. I went on all those panels, you know. We took the Ealing game up to the BBC and we used to play it on Sunday afternoons. SC:[…]
[…]t to live within it. And at that time of course there was less problems; there was no inflation and we had a rising income all the time, we went from radio to television, from television to colour television and there was always a rising income and the BBC was very well off. In fact, the government […]
[…]ir heart.VG: They did indeed; Miss London Ltd was a big success. I had him singing and dancing and everything in that.RF: Bandwaggon was based on the radio show.VG: I had very little to do with that, I drafted a script and polished a final script but I was really doing my fire training then, that wa[…]
[…] working. I did a lot of BBC work then. SC: Radio? DM: Yes. I went on all those panels, you […]
[…] had a rising income all the time, we went from radio to television, from television to colour television and there […]
[…] vetting it. And the Head of, Director of, television and radio broadcasting of the agency phoned me and he said […]