[…] Peter was optimistic. In fact the BBC banned it from television anywhere in the world. Peter Watkins left the BBC […]
[…]en’t got to Hong Kong yet. [Laughter] Hammer, aswe have said goes on and on and on, lovely film after lovely film. Until the mid’50s you didn’t touch television and according to the list, it was a film for television in ’57. Play of the Week, ITV.RENÉE GLYNNE: Ah, like Laura or I don’t kno[…]
[…] on his staff, and he was the chairman, wonderful man and, and enabled me to very, very successful company and ready to set up with the viewer to pay television. There was the first first one was revealed making programmes for pay television. That's why we call it British Home Entertainment for a wo[…]
[…]o the water. Very difficult for the crew.R. F. Oh yes, very uncomfortable working under water.C. D. Yes.R. F. The Industry is changing I suppose now. Television is taking over and is it more difficult to get assignments now?C. D. Well I wouldn’t know.R. F. Yes, but when I say now I mean at that time[…]
[…]tances. We had quite a row. Arthur supported us. They said it's quite right they shouldn't work on such a project.AL : Was it going Out On Australian television.BM: Stanley Horton, we'd both been in the Birmingham Film Society and gone into films, I'd been running it during the war sometime and he'd[…]
[…]icity job for about a year before I retired, we made, we took photographs and displayed them on a on a screen, on a screen, on a screen, sort of like television screen. And we had a little talk with them, you see. And that was done on a steel loop. And we had that, but I didn't use much in magnetic&[…]