[…]lin Company of Putney bridge, who fabulous drafter manufacturers, makers and us so I was a rack and stick man. YourRoy Fowler 7:26 family sounds well, founded in the were established in the Putney area.Speaker 1 7:30 Very well, yes, oh yes. He was going back sometime. Yes, he[…]
[…] (laughs), so you were much s ought after by the sound of it. CB: Well, you know, I didn’t go […]
[…]eople I met. Then there was Ted Hawkins, who used to was with Paramount. Then he came to go months, and then he went back to Paramount bill. He was a sound man. They were the principal characters. Anyway,Roy Fowler 7:00 this is what, 1940Speaker 1 7:03 just Yes, yeah. Round a[…]
[…]s with a commentator, me killing him, Mrs. Sheridan, swaging in music off her three turntable, 78 reproducer and somebody else making very elementary sound effects, and Harry Sheridan mixing the lot live one.Unknown Speaker 10:00 Take so that, as I say, that wasn't very sophisticated. An[…]
[…] as you know. They went over from optical to magnetic sound. I don't know if it was easy. I remember […]
[…]ut how did you meet Tony, just simply because it would probably, I don't know, all sorts of other emotions and you think I don't want to go down that sounds awful, really, in some respect that he's gone and never mentioned that ever again. But having said that, he was Tony was a very artistic in his[…]
[…] session. You wonder what on earth you're going to have done, you know, have you written written all the wrong notes in order because you're going to sound actually fractals on? So I remember him saying, Do come talk to me with this because I'm actually terrified. And we subsequently became great fr[…]
[…]right in the middle of it was the Conservative Films Officer, a redoubtable lady called Winifred Crum-Ewing. She looked every inch a Tory matron, and sounded it. She always turned up at General Council meetings. And everyone was fond of her because they knew what she was going to say and amidst all […]