Phil Windeatt

[…]orrect. All the technicians were paid. How was it funded? Erm, well there was American and British Animal Welfare Charities; RSPCA; British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection; Millennium Guild in New York. There’s a much more developed animal welfare movement in this country than in th[…]

Liz Forgan

[…]p;MI5 and told the story about F Branch that had been set up to do internal surveillance and had been routinelyLiz Forgan Page 18spying on trade unionists and members of left-wing political parties, which was an interesting and important story.[50:04]The other difficult, I mean there were a lot[…]

Daphne Anstey (nee Lily)

[…]ting. She was a darling, I like her so much.GS: When you say you got a job here and there, was there any formal facility for getting one, was there a union.DA: Yes, there was a union and I joined the union, and I remained a member of the union for a long time, this was in the States, they didn't hav[…]

Cyril Howard

[…]useI don't see a lot of need for a huge team. I must say over the years we have been associated with the unions we have never had a hard time with them, a really hard time,  I think the idea was you keep the men hap[…]

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.[…]

Ted Candy Transcript

[…] industrial relations; role of the ACTT; the Newsreel Agreement; National Union of Journalists. Section 4: World War Two and immediate […]

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[…]
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