[…]would you say what I know of it, what do you want to do? So we'll we'll devise it and we got another affects peripheral guys. Direct Foxwell on whose radio control you know what Battle of Britain flying, you know, flies on a regular you control stuff because all the robots we say robots are not robo[…]
[…]times ‘relaxing’ is about change, doing something different. That can be just as relaxing. I mean, I think now the word ‘relax’, like you have on the radio these voices which sound like they’re about to go to sleep telling you to relax, that’s the image we have of ‘relaxing’ now.JR: Yes, that’s a ve[…]
[…]and Jeanette Jeanette. Dang it Yes.John P Hamilton 9:10 So you were born in the sound booth Yes. Sound was not to mention of course sound radio Did you listen to radio? Oh,Gerald Chambers 9:17 very much so. And the wall timeshares and yes, a lot of the the I was an avid liste[…]
[…]. It would be in God's will. And that would mean that we were an expense of the nuisance in about 1936 when I was 20 apparently I heard a talk on the radio by Anthony Asquith about film societies presenting films that were not considered commercial for the public. I don't remember actually that but […]
[…]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[…]
[…] Project. The sub ject is Jean Anderson, actress, performing in radio, TV, motion pictures and the stag e. Interviewed by […]
[…]hink, you know, and we did a lot, there was only for effectively assistant producers acting as producers, we had no researcher, we had two pas, and a radio secretary. And that was it. And we were doing half an hour radio every week on radio for we were doing half an hour of television on BBC One on […]
[…]to say one very likely, very likely, anyway it was a dragon type with our hats. Anyway, I got in and they sent me off to an engineering department in radio and of course I was pretty flummoxed.Norman Swallow: Was that at Broadcasting House?Julia Cave: It was; no, it was Egton or somewhere, it […]
[…]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 […]