[…]dcasting sense? The Germans didn't have a chance. So I worked on lots of weekly programmes. One, for example, was called Kurt und Willi , and they're set in a sort of Southern German town.[Side 1, 18:48] NS: So this is in which language or many languages?DMW: In German.NS: Yeah, just one langu[…]
[…]g. WasRoy Fowler 25:09 that eventually, do you think an influence for good or for bad, that kind of pressure that he put upon you? Did it set you standards? In turn,Speaker 1 25:25 it set me, yes, Roy, it set me standards, which in later life, I found it blood and I impossibl[…]
[…]rojector which was the turning point of my life really because I was constantly using it. Not only did he give me the projector but he also gave me a set of films with it notably Hitchcock's blackmail.SPEAKER: M15He gave me that side the silent version obviously which I would whine through over and […]
[…]ntion to me at all. So we both were grumbling about the way we were brought up. She became a wonderful journalist. I think William is going to try to set up a trust in Oxford for his father.LW: What was it like working in the warWT: It was a mixture, when the nuisance raids started in the war I'd do[…]
[…]9:21 Wilcox do dhungana stockingsSid Cole 9:25 and pink so yes, I thinkUnknown Speaker 9:28 they were lots of different sets.Ernie Diamond 9:31 But you pretty bad for me very bad boy. That was a George Pearson was theUnknown Speaker 9:35 test nem[…]
[…]some of those, then she was called upon by two young men in annual McMasters, who you will have no annual masters, Shakespeare Company, who wanted to set up a theatre of their own, and experimental theatre doing most classical plays, and Shakespeare and modern experimental players and all sorts of t[…]
[…]bsp;a group of us became rather dissatisfied with the way things were going and set up under Donald Alexander's leadership. Data from the spin off which was a s[…]
[…]t on the edge of the big aerodrome. My father was German originally and became naturalised after my birth, having married an English lady in 1929 and settled in England. He had a champagne business that had come down to him through the family, which he managed mainly from England. He went over about[…]
[…]ce at all. But there was some young man who had recently been to see them and instead of showing them sketches, showed them little tiny models of the sets which was brilliant, because it allows for the camera to pan around. You can’t do that . . . . . makes six drawings. He said "Have you got any?" […]