[…]ort. Edgar had moved to Transport by then. RG: British Transport Films. SE: that they eventually said, "No, no, don't, you know, you'll be a director writer," ...he'd done a bit of directing here and there. But it took a long time, it was after we were married. But I remember, again, the first time […]
[…]e? It became a cult book at some American universities I think. Tryingto think who wrote it actually, because it doesn’t say. He’s quite a well-known writer andI’ve forgotten his name for the moment. Perhaps that’s one of those things I’ll jot downwhen I remember. It’s a silly story, it’s a fairy st[…]
[…]names, they're interesting. Three names. One was Ronnie Taylor. There from the Norse, who did some television and then went back to be being a comedy writer, and he wrote for Al Reed, and he wrote all of Al Reed's scripts and a lot of others as well. Ronnie Taylor died early on, almost Barney Colan,[…]
[…] my father used such pull as he'd got to get us both apprenticed into a local South Croydon munitions factory, called Creed's who made the actual typewriters. He because he knew the manager terribly well, who used to work for him had been one of his foreman, when he was the manager of a much bigger […]