[…] lives.Well, I never. Well, Sidney Street of course, was very famous wasn’t it?That’s right, that’s right, yes, yes.Yes. And in fact the other day on television we had the Hitchcock film for the first time.Oh really.That he sort of re, reconstructed the Sidney Street siege for the last ten minutes.A[…]
[…]ht for it. I think he gained a lot of respect, I think he had a lot of hard times. I mean I remember being turned away from – it wasn’t the Café Royal, it was one of those round Piccadilly, you know. I’m talking about pre-war of course, but...Turned away?Sara Erulkar Page 14Yes, because th[…]
fm10001.mp3[00:00:02] The copyright of this recording is vested in the A C T T history project. Stephen Peet cameraman, television director, television producer, lecturer. Recorded on the 6th of November 1990. INTERVIEWER Norman Swallow with Alan Lawson. Side one.[00:00:36] I: Stephen, when where yo[…]
[…]ers got there?Charles Wilder: No the Ostrers didn't come until 1931 I think, that's when the first film in the new studios was made, which was on the television the other night, Rome Express. And after that they made um, Jessie Matthews' Evergreen. And at one time in the new building we had five fil[…]
[…]r BEF HQ at Arras, that's when I changed over to the army. And Paris oh yes Paris. January 24th patrol demonstration; 28th presentation of colours to Royal Ulster Rifles, and so on, and so forth; 30th First militia fighting unit in France, I don't know what that was actually; contacted Indian unit -[…]
[…]d transcript is vested in the BECTU History Project. Barbara Harris was interviewed by Roy Fowler with John Hamilton on 30 August 1989. 1. Early television cameras and vision mixersRF: Was the next thing into television?BH: Yes, into television. Television started in 1946 and I with a lot of th[…]
[…]then there were people who dealt mainly with different sections of the union. And I myself dealt with the film side. And someone else would deal with television, and another person. Manny Yospa: What did the records consist of. Geoff Conway: It was the subscriptions, you would have records[…]
[…]tactics and everything else and I was trained as Airborne. [32.17] A few months before D-Day they said you are to go out as a Commando, out with No.4 Royal Marine Commando on D-Day with a detachment and one of the sergeants was Ernie Walter who later became an editor at MGM and we landed at D- Day o[…]