John Shearman

[…]ry nice camel man called galley Hatchard, who came to me in Pinewood when I'd been there a week or two, and said, We think that you ought to join the union. I said, praise be. Somebody suggested it and joined and got a card, and straight away, and there wasn't any King's regulations about it either.[…]

Dudley Lovell

[…]t him and accused him of sabotage on the boom, and he was sacked. That actually happened. But there's an excuse as an excuse me just because he was a union representative. And I really, I must say I had a ticket. But I didn't. Except for these meetings which we went to the back of the Power BI I've […]

adrian-andy-worker

[…] 1960s and also touches on the effects of the Trades Unions on working practices, providing several details of his rel […]

Russell Galbraith

[…]as taken out of his hands with national agreements affecting pretty well everybody but Roy wanted, really, a tight deal whenever he could get it. The Unions, on the other hand, I always thought it at the time, I could understand it but I always thought at the time, a little foolish because they want[…]

Taylor Downing

[…]oing to be fairly tricky getting into television as a researcher, particularly in an ITV company, where at that sort of level you are going to need a union ticket, an ACTT ticket, so my very first job was at the Imperial War Museum Film Department. My very first boss was Anne Fleming (BEHP Interview[…]

Kenneth Griffith

[…]Kenneth Griffith  35:39  Wasn't the minimum rate extremely low?  Kenneth Griffith  35:41  Oh, well, unions didn't come into it much then. Another, another reason for the decline? Colin Moffat  35:49  You mean, you could make […]

Lord Lew Grade

[…] the world, they are amazing and they don't look at union rules, they work any hours if they love the […]
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