[…] Board in Canada. And her husband was a very famous sound man, Walter Lee, and he went into the war […]
[…] few days earlier. I said, "Yeah, I think I'll like it here!" So he said, "Well, just remember, you make a buck for me, I'll make a buck for you!" It sounded good until you remembered there was one of him and God knows how many thousands of me, so it was an uneven trade! But I thought Roy did a real[…]
[…]o I've found with Maurice [Askew] that when you were post-synching and you could accept that it was a live - you were halfway there because it didn't sound flat and horrible. And with effects too, you say - well you didn't have to mention anything, I mean, he would give it it's maximum, you were hel[…]
[…] post office. But I knew I didn't really want to do that. The rest of my life and one day there was an advert in the local paper with a big picture a sound of music poster and the local Indie cinema saying be a cinema manager missing recruiting. So I thought I'd have a go at it day. I ended up in a […]
[…] think, but this was the first what came to be called, horribly I thought, the Classic Serial. Very daunting type of title isn’t it - Classic Serial? Sounds as if you’re going back to school.[A 10:06]And who, whose idea would that have been, have you any idea?Donald Wilson.Donald, it was Donald Wils[…]
[…]very vain man who had an inflated sense of his own abilities. He did have a vision, which was to make the complete artistic expression with music and sound and performance and colour and you know the whole thing, which they did with Tales of Hoffman and The Red Shoes to some extent that was on, on t[…]
[…] called Marie Burke. I don't remember a lot about it, except I was in the crowd as one of the sort of peasants in it.Rodney Giesler: One of the first sound films was it?Dicky Leeman: No, there'd been sound for some time on that.Rodney Giesler: And this was at BIP was it?Dicky Leeman: Yes. And then I[…]