Ted Candy Transcript

[…] this stage? TC: General manager. We didn’t have a managing director. I was also a director of the company, I […]

Ken Westbury

[…]About seven years I was working like that, and checking a lot of information which I never realised I was taking it in at the time, and worked with a director called Sanjay mackendrick, who was absolutely brilliant film called Whiskey hero. And I was clapper loader. And it was the operator's first f[…]

Adam Fullarton

[…] Yes, it would be. I: Aye. R: And the start of colour. I: Right, yeah. R: The start of colour was rather unfortunate for the floodlighting wasn't very good and, of course, all the Directors wanted it in colour and all the engineers said, "There's not enough light for this!" but y[…]

Taylor Downing

[…]as actually directing it or producing it? TD: The principal Producer was man called Richard Broad, who was one of the very great ITV documentary directors of the time, [who] now lives in the West of Ireland; if you want to interview him you have to travel over to Ireland because he never comes […]

Cyril Page

[…]. Um...just go back for seconds...These things come to my mind...Um...I got an award, at the BBC, and Rene Cutforth. So we had to go and see um...the Director General...Haley...and er up to Broadcasting House, and get a glass of sherry and a...lunch and all that, and he said, "Well, on behalf of the[…]

Maurice Askew

[…]on our own feet as it were. Religious Films handed over the technical stuff to GHW in 1947 I think. GHW stood for Gregory, Hake and Walker, the three director founders. It was a Methodist organised thing - I think the Methodists were often behind it - to do the technical side of the making of religi[…]
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