[…]relief, but I didn’t take it too seriously because having worked for a tiny bit in the film industry proper, there was that distinct feeling that television was well down the list – it was not regarded as a serious thing. And it was very much ‘them and us’, and I have to say the atmosphere at the BB[…]
[…]ding is vested in the BECTU History Project.The name of the interviewee is Lois Singer. Her last discipline and grade is L 18. That is television production. The name of the interviewer is Joyce Robinson. The date is the 16th of August 1993. side one Lois only one way to begin, when and w[…]
[…]reature of habit. So I did a fourth year, which was a film, a very basic film introduction course. And I managed, managed to get a job at Granada Television as a trainee camera operator, video camera operator, which was November 68 I'm now coming up to my 21 years so I'm still there. You asked about[…]
[…]re the place was done. He got most of his money before a penny was put down, and he opened it entirely on spec, he got all the food people and the provision people saying look I've got 500 people want to come to the opening night, and this was the guy who owned and ran the Hollywood reporter, a bril[…]
[…]ind of off screen personality damaged his reputation in terms of what he delivered as a director. He was a great director. Yeah, yeah. He had a great vision in his Ernest Marsh 39:00 movies. Look at any of his films, and the cutting is so smooth because he The problem was […]