[…] the BBC and that’s where the relationship with the National Archives comes into play and that goes, well certainly, for television programme output, radio programme output, certain parts of the music operation. They’re quite beyond the BBC’s interests and usage and I don’t think that’s ever b[…]
[…]. I never met Rank; he didn't seem to appear ... but Captain Norman Walker. And the other day, just a few weeks ago, I noticed in the TV Times or the Radio Times that there was a film called Hard Steel on and I knew I was in it. I had no idea what I did in it. But I knew I was in it, and I knew, I f[…]
[…]lose down, it just closed down for a month, absolutely incredible. JH: There was a huge problem with transmitters of course then, there was with radio.BH: Yes, that's right.RF: You mean during the winter?BH: It was a very bad winter and a lot of snow.JH: [unintelligible]BH: I think things could[…]
[…] on to date Lester, as he was known any verse to be Richard. But he was deepness to them. And we were allocated the Doom shows that we're moving from radio to television. So the first one was idiot weekly price top one's meant to be a newspaper. And then it was a shackled read. And then some of Fred[…]
[…] wood. And the idea is they get cut free during the course of it. And I was on one of those loggers. And I can remember talking to John on the on the radio, and someone cut the logger free before it was supposed to go free. And the last thing they saw of me was drifting down the mile and it took the[…]
[…]d film. (TIME 27.09)DARROL BLAKE: Simon Cherry, The Man in Black even before PC.49. RENÉE GLYNNE: Ahh, even before. So, they were radio spin-offs and amusing and competently shot, well lit. The rest of the film industry laughed at us. Youcouldn’t say you were working for Hammer. […]
[…]s she appeared through the stage door where it said red light shooting coming through. And she walked across the stage. And I put a little tiny radio, because at that time you didn’t have tapes in those days, and I know that as I saw them walking towards to break the silence I turned the radio[…]
[…]rse the two evening shows you see, with a break between. But the feature film was not as long as they are today but the news of course - there was no radio. The public relied on it. Scraps of reel. And anyway, the news and the travel picture, was more than valued. You see they go out now. But many o[…]
[…] . REN ÉE GLYNNE: Ahh, even before. So, they were radio spin -offs and amusing and competently shot, well lit. […]