I rode into the dawning world of television in 1944 on a train.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
After the war, in which I served as a pilot in the Air Force, I took up films.
I built up a knowledge of 1960s and '70s British films because my dad used to work nights, and I'd sit up with my mum and watch films - 'How I Won the War' and the films of Richard Lester, Karel Reisz and John Schlesinger.
I was a child of World War Two . I saw films of pilots taking off from aircraft carriers and decided that was the only thing I wanted to do. And it had to be flying from sea carriers. Airfields were not enough.
The first thing I did for TV was a pilot for CBS.
I did this film with Russell Crowe called 'The Water Diviner,' which took place just after WWI. It was fascinating because the weapons between WWI and WII were very different. I had to learn how to ride horses in a battle setting. It was important that we rode a certain way.
I flew back and forth and did episodes of Roseanne while I was at Yale.
And then I went into television; and then television moved from the East Coast to Hollywood.
I was in the pilot for Spinal Tap before it was a movie.
I have a very specific memory of watching 'Singing in the Rain,' and looking at myself in the mirror after watching it and perceiving myself as one of those people that I was just watching on T.V. It was just kind of a knowing that this would be the world that I would enter into. And that's what I did.
Before the BBC, I joined the Navy in order to travel.