[…]ilm, people would say, next it goes into the paper. It's incredible the amount of stuff that comes in. I remember that there are offices more or less worldwide, plus stringers, hundreds or a couple of 100 stringers, 100 in the United States of land and others scattered around the rest of the world, […]
[…]it.” So, lesson for management, keep your bloody family life at home. I'm sorry, Tom is now dead, bless him, he had been supportive as you know worldwide, at Montreux or he was a tower at Montreux. He was a great guy but Till Death Us Do Part offended his very Scottish upbringing. But you must[…]
[…] 1973 and then worked in Holland until 1978. Worked for Worldwide, Millbank and Moving Picture Company. 1990’s moved to video […]
[…]d, play the system. Don't blame anybody for playing the system, but it's the management that has to manage, and what they had was ranks path, a guild worldwide, Anglo, Scottish, Pearl and Dean. Well, Pearl and Dean, not so much because they were wedded to the cinema, but they had organizations compl[…]
[…]But he has always played about with tapes and everything so anyway he did and stayed with us for about five years and then went to a dubbing theatre, Worldwide in Soho and then from there to Tony Palmer, Ladbroke Films, and then when we were building the new sound complex here he came back to Twicke[…]
[…]de there.Was there?Y es.Ah, well my memory’s doing alright in that case. And he was tremendous friends with, with Hepworth and he made a whole lot of films over here. Mm, I don’t know how many but of course, they were short films in those days little, little tiny ones, you know. But he had an actor […]
[…] : Is it? Lew Grade : Yes ...and it will worldwide, which shows that the public will look at films […]
[…]picked it up. So it went through London in a normal car. It doesn’t any more of course, but... so that was it.Christine’s career took her, literally, worldwide. This included Japan, where the BBC paid for her to have language lessons: I worked on an amazing programme, again with Peter Pag[…]
[…] it too terrifying. And they they they had part of it out what? It was such a childish picture it always astounded meinitially it didn't do that well worldwide but over the years it Masson made its price over and over again. I thought it was in the classrooms, you tend to get bound up with what pict[…]