[…] later.Alan Lawson: At Stoll's... was it?Tilly Day: No, no.Alan Lawson: Ah ha. This was a silent?Tilly Day: This was at Walton-on-Thames.Alan Lawson: Ah ha. Are we getting out of date yet? We're getting our dates mixed up. But can you remember any of the films you were on at[…]
[…];studios, the only thing I have ever built that was permanent, so Ican say that I rebuilt Thames Television.How did that come about that you rebuilt the studios? They just asked me to.Because&nbs[…]
[…] on and that we lived quite near the shop where his father had the shop and he said ‘well, I have got the book but I ammoving tomorrow to Kingston on Thames and it is buried in cases. Will I send it to you?’ And then he sort of said ‘What do you do?’ I said ‘well, I was a trade union organiser […]
[…] this to, to the telly. So I went in to Thames with Richard Broad and met Catherine Freeman. SF: Oh […]
[…] the June, June 1940 when I actually went to Kingston-on- Thames barracks. And by that time I'd been up to […]
[…] This was a silent? Tilly Day: This was at Walton-on- Thames. Alan Lawson: Ah ha. Are we getting out of […]
[…]ghtie/frock. Why I had to do that. I don't know. No idea, but it was soaking wet and freezing. And we did...we did a scene on the river, on the River Thames in the middle of the night. And Rosemary, I can't remember her other name, Nichols. Fabulous actress. Was then in.. she was with Topol in Fiddl[…]
[…]t that time it went on at 7.30. Fine. Down here it went on at midnight. Now that was because there was this jealousy of prime time. Thames wanted their own programmes at that time. Nothing against us, but you ain’t going there and picking our best time. So, that wouldn’[…]
[…]ry, we’ll go and move somewhere else we know you‘re going to move us back in again’. So I decided that to take this to, to the telly. So I went in to Thames with Richard Broad and met Catherine Freeman.SF: Oh yes, oh I know her.Who folded her capacious arms.SF: Yes.And said... Because, oh I know wha[…]