Ted Candy Transcript

[…] and escape from a POW camp. Section 2: World War Two and immediate post-war period – part 1 [23:33 mins] […]

Michael Aldridge

[…]my interest in photography. Didn't exactly work, but at least it gave me a good training.  I started in the print room in the laboratory and for two years did all the various crafts within the laboratory, neg developing, printing, step printing, optical printing, finally ending up in the camera[…]

Cedric Dawe

[…]stage work.C. D. Oh yes, that was in Canada.R. F. In theatres rather than cinemas.C. D. No not cinemas. Stage shows. It was in the days when they had two features. And I designed the stage show which went between the two films.R. F. Which was . . what... a very glitzy sort of enterprise was it. Show[…]

Peter Tanner

[…]iting on.Peter Tanner: Country subjects because we lived in Sussex, near Grinstead and they were to do with the country seasons. I did do one or two criticisms of local dramatic society's productions.Roy Fowler: Is writing an interest which continued.Peter Tanner: It continued, as wel[…]

Mike Bradsell

[…]nd on mud. But there was a little wooden area that that captured the tide when it came in, which never got more than about three feet of non magma me two feet deep, but the the theoretically deep end, which young kids could splash about in and it was I love the the fact that it wasn't just an ordina[…]

Michael Houldey

[…] and I thought, well, maybe, maybe I could, maybe I could. The story of the film. It was actuallyUnknown Speaker  9:54  three parts. It was two teenagers who were leaving school and going onUnknown Speaker  10:00  It's University and had a gap year. And they put ads in the paper […]

Interview

[…]nd on mud. But there was a little wooden area that that captured the tide when it came in, which never got more than about three feet of non magma me two feet deep, but the the theoretically deep end, which young kids could splash about in and it was I love the the fact that it wasn't just an ordina[…]

Charles Bennett

[…]e - I don't think she knew about my birth - and it was a place called Shoreham in Sussex, where "Bungalow Town" is now. In those days there were only two or three bungalows and mine was a disused railway carriage, and I was born on the beach at Shoreham in a disused railway carriage. That any help, […]

Margaret Thomson

[…]xpeditions. And while he was there, it was discovered by famous Dr. Wilson of the Antarctic that he had tuberculosis, and couldn't go. But when I was two years old, the expedition finally set out from New Zealand and I was taken down to the quayside, where, my parents told me, Captain Scott held me […]
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