[…] screenwriter. One of the producers and directors who shaped British television drama in its formative years, He was a key figure […]
[…] workshop at this year’s Annual Conference of the Oral History Society, which promises to be an unmissable event for anyone […]
[…] workshop at this year’s Annual Conference of the Oral History Society, which promises to be an unmissable event for anyone […]
[…] from the AHRC-funded ‘History of Women in British Film and Television project, 1933-1989’, led by Dr Melanie Bell (Principal Investigator, […]
[…] Romeo and Juliet (1968), as well as various Gerry Anderson television programmes . He, Jim Shields and Lionel Strutt discuss […]
[…] it. Sidney Cole: Ah-huh. The RIBA being? Carmen Dillon: The Royal Institute of British Architects. Sidney Cole: Yes, oh yes. […]
[…] when you’d finished your square bashing where were you posted? Royal Fusiliers, which I was very pleased about, by sheer […]
[…] a week, were always devoted to the activities of the Royal Family and sporting events. Do you feel that this […]
[…] felt were coming at that time? Was it because of television for instance? William Fielder: Warner Brothers were taking over […]
[…] Cole. Sidney was a constant presence in the film and television industries from the 1930s to the 1980s. He was […]