[…]dio. Yeah, that's right. Yeah. But I think the last picture I did with Harry Waxman was I felt married to him actually . was Biggest Dog in the World. We did that. But Harry used to phone me at two o'clock in the morning after, you know, he's been thinking about what we did with this stu[…]
[…]gs like Say it With Flowers. But Say it with Flowers didn't come next, I think he did one called Men of Yesterday which was, it was before the Second World War, it was in 1937, it was about the First World War - 'great theme, inspiring interpretation, excellent teamwork and direction, showmanship pr[…]
[…]s and high days and holidays. And then he joined the army and became a drummer in the Royal Fusiliers, and a buglerJohn Taylor: Was that in the First World WarBill Cotton Jr: Yes, the First World War, then he became a pilot, crashed in his plane. And when he came out he played professional football […]
[…]efore we go off this these early years 1923 years has been your year of birth and mine a couple of years later, actually, we both sort of entered the world. At the time when when the talking picture. A commercial commercially anyhow was starting to evolve and become a more practical consideration fo[…]
[…]ed to bring his girlfriends in when he was dubbing. Very strange goings on in those days. Then Beaconsfield shut down at the beginning of the [Second World] war, and we thought there would be no more films made, and I had this leg, couldn’t do very much in the way of fighting, and it may well have s[…]
[…]ector called Connor who was married to one of the Savilles of the Shaw Shipping Line. And when he left, he left Newcastle, went down to London on the World Service which operated from Oxford Street, that big store on the corner of Regent St, it was the BBC then as well. We had a new station director[…]
[…] left, he left Newcastle, went down to London on the World Service which operated from Oxford Street, that big store […]
[…] who were all at Denham. But in my capacity one did not mix with them like one would now. You didn't speak unless spoken to. It was quite a different world.KGY: Would you say at this stage of your career you learned from themCC: A lot. Perhaps not at that very early stage. But when I was in a positi[…]
[…]ou came from your early years? Yeah, Ernest Marsh 0:44 I was born in Folkestone, Kent a couple of months before the end of World War Two, and lived there until 1953 in the day after the Coronation in 1953 we moved from noisy Folkestone to a little hamlet in in Suffolk call[…]
[…]- really about hygiene. It sounds terribly dull, it was not dull at all - about the problems of living as a community. But it was about health, about world health really. And the last five minutes was a reconstruction, it ran about forty minutes and the last five or ten minutes was a reconstruction […]