[…]aurants never there was a good restaurant was very popular. We went with one of our cameramen. The first one we had who was a bit taller, there was a television camera man. And there was this queue waiting for a table and all Peter did was put up his head click his fingers he got a table for camera […]
fm10001.mp3[00:00:02] The copyright of this recording is vested in the A C T T history project. Stephen Peet cameraman, television director, television producer, lecturer. Recorded on the 6th of November 1990. INTERVIEWER Norman Swallow with Alan Lawson. Side one.[00:00:36] I: Stephen, when where yo[…]
[…]SC: What had happened?CC: They'd had a fire.SC : It didn't burn the studio down.CC: It burnt quite a lot down.SC: It still survived right down to the television era. What were your first jobs when you were at Wembley, were you still floor assistant carrying cups of tea.CC: I was in the cutting room.[…]
[…] Page 25carried on, a new idea, it was a very early thing this, presumably because it’s the earlysixties, they did a video van, they were called television vans, I think, and the idea was that they had telecine in them so that they could show films and they had a little interview place and they[…]
[…]that’s the sort of thing we get over here, the sort of sound we get over here” to all these people, you see, and I couldn’t get … he gave me my first television set as a present and he gave Ralph Kemplen something for his car. And I had, had a cold and he, he’d say to the assistant direc[…]
[…] with women and men from across the UK film and television industries. With nearly 700 recordings so far, it is […]