Dicky Leeman

[…] to do this. We had somebody singing it out of vision and he did this beautiful bit of choreography. I […]

Dicky Leeman

[…]wn as Tam, and Ivor Barnard, were two of the characters playing in the play, which was produced by Raymond Massey, who later became well known on television, although he was a Hollywood star in his own right.Rodney Giesler: Can I go back a bit earlier though, to your first early jobs?Dicky Leeman: Y[…]

John Schlesinger

[…]ow it started but I used to refer to my work as film which it was, 35mm film. And I said I'm making films. And she said you're not, you're making television. I said absolute rubbish, it's shown on television but we're making films. We edit it, we photograph it in exactly the same way that any film i[…]

Sheelagh Rees

Sheelagh Reece DRAFT. Tape 1 Side AThis recording was transcribed by funds from the AHRC-funded ‘History of Women in British Film and Television project, 1933-1989’, led by Dr Melanie Bell (Principal Investigator, University of Leeds) and Dr Vicky Ball (Co-Investigator, De Montfort University). (201[…]

Alan Izod

[…]sort of semi feature film. It had professional actors. The leading lady spot was played by Diana Sheridan who is still very, very active today on television. I don't remember a great deal about that film. I don't think it was terribly successful. It was rather rather hackneyed, I think that the Admi[…]

Harry Coventry

[…]ham with until the start of the first second world war. Nick Gilbey  1:13  Did your parents have any connection with the television film industry, Harry Coventry  1:21  no, no. My, my father had a job. He worked in London with a Cable and Wireless co[…]

Paul Collard

[…]in emulsions and started to introduce them, Kodak introduced them in a range of films called EXR. Kodak EXR negative films, and subsequently in their Vision One, Vision Two, Vision Three products. They mixed T-grain with ordinary to start with. So, they created the T-grain to start with and it reall[…]
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