[…]ssessing what worked required. what's essential. May is not easy or getting to an artistic, there's all the math.Jim Shields 24:29 On the screen, we all visualise what we thinkJohn Hargreaves 24:31 no one's really prepared to take the blame if something this year. Well, of co[…]
[…]. I became fascinated with this and loveddoing the programmes, because of showing this, they made such lovely patterns and looked so beautiful on the screen. And after that, it so happened, although I'm really jumping, there was a redundancy...John P Hamilton In 1956, yes.Joan Kemp-Welch: […]
[…]ought - the two of them cost £12.00, that was all'. And the owners of that cinema wouldn't buy a pair of condensers for their projectors. I mean, the screen, as you can imagine, the picture how bad it was. And Kip said 'I would leave it to them as a present but they would be broken and I would still[…]
[…]never thought I would. I always thought it would be dreary beyond belief. But I got hooked. And then I had a series of other jobs, designing and silk screen printing, and this and that. But when John advertised for an animator, I thought, "Ah, this is your lucky day." And I didn't mean just for me, […]
[…]s are going off, people screaming, rushing around the streets, Piccadily collapsing under attack and so on, suddenly a great big fish appeared on the screen and blew bubbles, this was because we never had previews or anything like that, we were always working right up to the last minute, and nobody […]
[…] print and in fact the most ambitious, it was silk screen and goodness knows what, and the most ambitious which […]