Harry Booth

Harry Booth (born in London, England), is a film director, film producer, screenwriter and editor. He began his film career in 1941.

Harry Booth (right) while shooting Going Dutch

Booth debuted as a director with the war documentary Blitz on Britain (1960). His subsequent films included A King's Story (1965),[1] which was nominated for an Academy Award.[2]

Booth's work on television included directing 14 episodes of Here Come the Double Deckers (1970-1971), a children's series.[1]

Filmography

Director

Editorial department

  • Rockshow - assistant editor (1980)
  • The Avengers post-production coordinator (12 episodes, 1968–1969)
  • Visit to Spain TV episode (supervising editor) (1962)

Sound department

  • Robin Hood: The Movie (1991) (V) (dubbing editor)

Writer

Editor

Composer

gollark: `The Internet is a public platform`
gollark: Neither are, say, emails.
gollark: I mean, privately sent messages sent over the internet are, you know, *not* public?
gollark: As I said, according to that Wikipedia article, even just relatively small-scale surveillance has *already been abused* to harm activists.
gollark: And besides, I don't care if it's constitutional, I care if it's actually ethical.

References

  1. Walker, Craig (2011). On The Buses: The Complete Story. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 978-1-907792-16-8. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  2. "("A King's Story" search results)". Academy Awards Database. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.