[…]y now?” But it was still on there, and obviously crossed out, and that’s the way we were treated, and we had no respect at all from most of the management. And no encouragement and it was a battle to get things done. Even in Saturday Club days… It got even worse later. 3[…]
[…]latively new at the time. It was a fun place to work. It went really well. Pete the people in the BFI at the time.SPEAKER: M1It had its hierarchy its management hierarchy. I think Stanley Reed was ahead of it at the time. John Huntley was head of film appreciation. Department. And the National Film […]
[…] I say, the opportunity arose to go into the higher management course. Oh, in the meantime I had been a […]
[…]lm studios at Ealing. And so, I went for an interview and I think there were four people interviewing me. There was obviously part of the management of the department, there was somebody from Personnel, somebody from Appointments Department. In those days, Appointments Department w[…]
[…]p; Before we go away from your youth, was your scoring as a whole influenced by what you wanted to do? That you wanted to be in cinema? You did management studies when you left school.
00:18:19 JIM WHITTELL: No I was going to be a chemist, I w[…]
[…] was Maud Howell who looked after the scripts and general management, she was a sort of agent. She co -directed […]
[…]fore, but this was a big event. They came. They in their bus from Poland, and they stayed for three weeks, and we basically got involved in the stage management as well. I was in the middle of running the cafe at the fruit market at the time, but I would bring all the cakes over at the end of the da[…]
Dicky Leeman (television and film director) b.1912 by admin — last modified Aug 15, 2008 01:39 PM BIOGRAPHY: Born in […]