Muriel Box

[…] He explained it to me and said he was the Union and you couldn't work there without a ticket and […]

Alf Tunwell – Transcript

[…] were one of the first newsreel cameramen to join the union and to try to get your colleagues organised in […]

Hugh Stewart

[…] to the hope that something was happening in the Soviet Union. And although with the monstrosities of Stalin, it gradually […]

Tilly Day

[…] occasion on 'The Arsenal Murder Mystery'[sic] with him in his Union Jack shirt? Tilly Day: Oh yes...no, no! That wasn't […]

Mike Bradsell

[…]documentaries. And a lot of the time we were servicing other people's films. And it, it didn't matter what we did, because we weren't bothered by the union. If I was initially employed as a dubbing theatre, projectionists, which is something you'd be very familiar with. And it was eye bliss. When I […]

John Agnew

[…]rate was low, it just didn't make sense. I: So, when did you pack up and leave STV? R: 2005. I: Right and had you been a member of the Union? R: Yes. I: When you were here? R: Yes. I: But when you went freelance, you would still be in the Union but as a Freelancer?[…]

Interview

[…]ade a very successful film. The one he offered me and I wasn't to join Michael again until we did a film called gold in South Africa much against the union's wishes because apartheid was in full stream then and that was a project with Roger Moore. Yeah. And I worked with Roger doing second unit and […]

Penny Woolcock

[…], that there was before, you know, looking at the BBC, and so on, you know, and in those times very, very difficult to get into TV, you had to have a union ticket. And most of the directors who were working at that time came through something called a TAPs scheme, they got first class degrees at Oxf[…]
Scroll to Top