[…]Mm, and also huge campaigns which were run by the union importantly, which were about the future of the film industry, which were about the future of television, should we have a second, should the BBC have a second channel, should they have a second channel. What should we do with Channel Four, sho[…]
[…]mething really big here. And that was directed by Arthur Hiller who subsequently made a very big name for himself. But that was only his he'd been in television. But that was only his second picture. Again, it was almost unbelievable. Some of it was was brilliant in some of it. I mean, it was the st[…]
[…] a creature of habit. So I did a fourth year, which was a film, a very basic film introduction course. And I managed, managed to get a job at Granada Television as a trainee camera operator, video camera operator, which was November 68 I'm now coming up to my 21 years so I'm still there. You asked a[…]
[…] interview w ith Peter Dimmock in 1990 about the BBC’s television coverage of the Coronation in 1953 The Olympic Games […]
[…] around the world, here, there and everywhere Nick Gilbey 0:52 I see so there was, there wasn't any family connection with television, or Ian Rutter 0:56 not at all. No, I got into television by accident. We lived in pinner, and I had won a techn[…]
[…]e? Really then quite significant.Speaker 1 0:48 Oh, it was completely significant due to the fact that that writers have territories. And television does tend to be not dominated by the Metropolitan voice inevitably, that's what the BBC was. That's where a lot of writers are. So you sudd[…]
Alan Lawson 0:08 The copyright of this recording is vested in the BECTU history project. Ann Turner arts features television producer, interviewer, Norman Swallow, recorded on the 22nd of March 1995. side oneshouting No, no first where when were you born?Ann Turner 0:42 I was[…]