[…] Dennis Connolly - no-one's heard anything about. And he was trying to make a cartoon. Kay Mander: What year would […]
[…] Cine Guild is a name to be conjured with and try and tell us about your. Tell us about the […]
[…]esn't didn't exist in those days. That was a Victorian invention after the railways but so if you can imagine this very much farming open farming countryside, North Somerset, say my family, the earliest we can get back to was written records and 1610. And we have a continuous record. They were farme[…]
[…] before. How did it work? You had to…EH: You had to have a Union ticket. ACCT were the higher echelons and [NACCE?] were the premiere ones. And I did try for ages for a [NACCE?] one when I was doing the wardrobe from the commercials and actually ended up sitting on the lap of one of them. We used to[…]
[…]ywright called C. P. Taylor, Cecil Taylor. It wasn't one of his best I have to say but I didn't have a lot, David really had a deadline that I had to try and meet and so, in the end, I went with Cecil's play. It was our breakthrough really, in a sense, although STV had done some other Drama but of c[…]
[…] I've been quite fortunate in that, well, as a team we are able to either be sociable or not be sociable depending on what kind of person you are. We try to have more social nights out. We try to get people more involved but the team's always growing so, I believe, we are trying to do something this[…]
[…] And to my amazement I got her letter back with the BBC heading and it was the BBC at that time were erecting low power transmitters all over the country which in the event of any craft coming over labour they went through as they were into it and then came back down again. And the engineer in charg[…]
[…]ey come out in the afternoon you were doing that night show itemsBG What about dubbing.CY Yeah. the magazine items were we cut through the morning we try and get them up. There's only four minutes still need quite a lot of mixing and music and effects about the subject.BG How did they do the comment[…]
[…]in London and England away from all the horrors’, you know. I didn’t have imagination enough to realise what it must have been like to leave your country, leave everything behind you, and I said to Dr Wolff, who was extremely distinguished in his field, he had his own programmes in Germany and all t[…]
[…]bout eight of these things. It was, I think probably, the most boring television programme evermade. I’m sorry about it, but [laughter] it was a good try. But I always thought that people would forgive us anything at the start of Channel 4, except using this wonderful opportunity just to do somethin[…]