Scarecrow Press
Pages: 274
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-8108-5723-0 • Paperback • April 2006 • $87.00 • (£67.00)
Walter Mycroft (1891-1959) was a film journalist and Britain's most prolific pre-war film producer, working on over 200 films.
Vincent Porter is Emeritus Professor of Mass Communications at the University of Westminster. He is the coeditor (with James Curran) of British Cinema History (1983) and coauthor (with Sue Harper) of British Cinema of the 1950s: The Decline of Deference (2003).
Part 1 Acknowledgments
Part 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 1. The Poet in the Pub
Chapter 4 2. Critic by Chance
Chapter 5 3. Journey into Films
Chapter 6 4. Halfway House
Chapter 7 5. Fade In
Chapter 8 6. Comic Business
Chapter 9 7. The Glittering Prizes
Chapter 10 8. The Man Who Was Elstree
Chapter 11 9. Some of My Best Friends...
Chapter 12 10. The Man Who Knew Too Much
Chapter 13 11. Grief
Chapter 14 12. New Blood
Chapter 15 13. The Captains and the Kings
Chapter 16 14. The Way Is the Stars
Chapter 17 15. Farewell Scene
Part 18 Appendix A: Scenario Writing: Principles of Adaptation: Hints to Authors
Part 19 Appendix B: Finding a New Screen Story Every Fortnight
Part 20 Appendix C: Films as an Industrial Element of Entertainment: Sane Production Costs Will Triumph over British Studio Crisis
Part 21 Appendix D: Shaw—and the Devil to Pay
Part 22 The Filmography of Walter C. Mycroft
Part 23 Index
Part 24 About the Author and Editor
What Mycroft tells us about Elstree life and production politics is often valuable. But the icing on the cake is his writing style: old fashioned, tart and melodramatic at times, at others absurdly pretentious...Porter was wise not to iron out such kinks, and his introduction is exemplary, examining Mycroft and his Elstree adventures carefully and judiciously, and encouraging us to do the same.
— Sight and Sound, November 1, 2006
Film journalist Walter Mycroft (1891-1959) was Britain's most prolific prewar film producer. Written mainly in the 1940s, this memoir offers a detailed account of Mycroft's participation in the British film industry during the 1930s. Some of his earlier writings on the aesthetics and business of film production are found in the appendices. Editor Porter (emeritus, U. of Westminster) has also provided an introduction and filmography.
— Reference and Research Book News, August 2006