[…]remember the wording. It said no one, in great big capital letters, must interfere with this man in the execution of his duty as a sound engineer and recordist, which meant you could go anywhere and if you were stopped by the military police either British or Canadian or Americans you just showed th[…]
[…], right. The thing was right, the sound recorders was a very difficult, reactionary man, George Burgess, who was a pain did not have the record. Good recordist but he was also very bureaucratic and obstructive.Interviewer 32:06 Let me ask you about your statement about Bennett standing o[…]
[…] it was at Fox-British that I joined ACTT, because that was early '35 and you were having - ACTT was having a drive, and - was it Jack Cox, the sound recordist?Sidney Cole: John...Kay Mander: John Cox, the sound recordist, recruited me.Sidney Cole: What sort of - can you remember the background of p[…]
[…] Did I say not cameramen er we had my brother David eventually joined the firm he was of course a cameraman full time.Um ...... but assistants, sound recordists and assistants and electricians and grips. (yes, yes) And we would supply them on all sorts of different kinds of assignments. Commercials […]
[…] doing. But there wasn't, we had Sound which was a great problem on the wartime films, there was always trouble because people would forget the sound recordist and Leo had a girlfriend with him sitting outside in their van, they would forget it while people were having dirty jokes about them. If, wh[…]
[…]u see, I, it, there are [???] send it over the first wagon in France with two Americans, and we all got on very well. ​Q:​So now you are a sound recordist on the newsreel. You’re back here in London? 00:30:14​ADOLPH:​I was, I was, but now I’m retired and I’m glad of it. ​Q:​You were t[…]
[…] Leslie Bacon. Alan Lawson : And there was a sound recordist who worked with them too. He wore sandals but […]
[…] thing. He went to dear old Ed Pawley the sound recordist, who was Frank Bryce's brother-in-law...and so Ed Pawley said, […]
[…] thing. He went to dear old Ed Pawley the sound recordist, who was Frank Bryce's brother-in-law...and so Ed Pawley said, […]