Derek Malcolm

[…]the reviews and doesn't care what the film cost, or what's happened to the director or anything. It's just that they, you know, they see it up on the screen, and they're able to, but I tend to be much more interventionist, possibly because the gardener and my own nature. So I've always been the kind[…]

Jean Anderson

[…] I was probably the only exception – were Glasgow citizen actors. And it was a true story of a Scottish mining disaster that again was put on the big screen and on television recently; it was a very good film.  I was the part of the head of the rescue team that went down, and was one of the old[…]

Karel Reisz

[…]t the Rank Organisation were absolutely horrified when we delivered it. I remember there was a screening to which John Davis came, JohnDavis was then the Stalin of the Rank Organisation, and […]

Frances Cockburn

[…]. I can remember going to New York. There  was a British week, and Prince Philip was opening it. And we had as the opening piece of four or five screen display of the guards marching across from screen to screen to screen. And we were rehearsing this, always think of the Americans as being the […]

Jimmy Wright

[…]bsp;as I say the air the little model aircraft was static in the center of screen all the time but we were tracking in close to it to give the impress[…]

Joan Kemp

[…] an actor, working initially in the theatre and subsequently on screen. Her film credits include The Citadel (1938) and Goodbye […]

Stanley Watkins

[…]o get an instrument used when I was on the publicity job for about a year before I retired, we made, we took photographs and displayed them on a on a screen, on a screen, on a screen, sort of like television screen. And we had a little talk with them, you see. And that was done on a steel loop. And […]
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