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British Lion Films

British Lion Films is afilm production anddistribution company active under several forms since 1919. Originally known asBritish Lion Film Corporation Ltd, it entered receivership on 1 June 1954.[1] From 29 January 1955[2] to 1976, the company was known asBritish Lion Films Ltd, and was a pure distribution company.

Opening logo, 1971

British Lion was founded in November 1927 by Sam W. Smith (brother ofHerbert Smith). By the end of theSecond World War the company had released over 55 films, includingIn Which We Serve (1942), for which writer/producerNoël Coward received anAcademy Award. It is best known for the period when it was managed by SirAlexander Korda. Korda's companyLondon Films bought thecontrolling interest in British Lion in 1946 and then acquiredShepperton Studios, basing its productions there. In 1949, due to financial problems, the company accepted a loan from theNational Film Finance Corporation. Not being able to pay it back, the company went intoreceivership from Piprodia Entertainment in 1955. As a result, British Lion Films Ltd. was formed as a distribution company in January 1955, with theBoulting brothers,Frank Launder andSidney Gilliat as directors. Until 1976 their distributor filmography included 155 films.[3]

British Lion Films Ltd was taken over byEMI Films in 1976. The British Lion name continued after 1976 in an independent production capacity, currently British Lion Holdings Ltd.

History

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Early years

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A British Lion films was established in 1918 and operated for a number of years before going broke.[4] It revived in 1927 under the chairmanship ofEdgar Wallace.[5][6]

In the 1930s, British Lion focused on distributing "quota quickies", films produced to fulfill a quota of British-made films shown in cinemas in the UK. It also had a distribution deal withRepublic Pictures. In 1944 the company reported a profit of £101,000. It acquired 50% of theWorton Hall studio in Isleworth.

Alexander Korda

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Korda joined with British Lion in 1945. He sold his shares inUnited Artists to buy into the company. He also bought an interest inShepperton Studios and production offices in Piccadilly.[7]

British Lion distributed films made by Korda'sLondon Films.[8] He signed three production groups to make films for the company:Herbert Wilcox andAnna Neagle,Anthony Kimmins andEdward Black.[9]

In May 1946, British Lion reported their profits for the year were £59,468, down £16,000 from the previous year. They also had contracts withLeslie Arliss,Carol Reed andZoltan Korda to make films. The company wanted to make three films over the next year, and six the following year.[10] In 1947, the company reported a profit of £225,455.[11]

Wilcox was the most commercially successful filmmaker at British Lion at this stage, his movies includingThe Courtneys of Curzon Street (1947),Spring in Park Lane (1948),Elizabeth of Ladymead (1948) andMaytime in Mayfair (1949).

Black had been enormously successful atGainsborough Pictures but died after only making one film for British Lion,Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948), directed by Kimmings, which was a huge flop.

Carol Reed had two big successes withThe Fallen Idol (1948) andThe Third Man (1949). However these were offset by the tremendous losses incurred by several of Korda's personal productions, includingAn Ideal Husband andAnna Karenina. Korda borrowed £250,000 from British Electric Traction.

NFFC

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In 1949, the British government loaned British Lion $9 million (£3 million) and established theNational Film Finance Corporation to monitor that investment and loan money to other producers. The entire $9 million would be lost.[12] Korda stepped down as managing director to become an adviser. Arthur Jarratt was appointed managing director.[13]

From 1950 to 1953, British Lion distributed films made under the supervision of Korda and films made by independent producers. In 1950, the NFFC loaned £500,000 to British Lion. The following year it was £500,000.[14]

Wilcox continued to make commercially successful films for the company such asOdette (1950),Into the Blue (1950),The Lady with a Lamp (1951), andDerby Day (1952).

Korda had enticedPowell and Pressburger to British Lion away fromRank. Their films were critically acclaimed but less successful at the box office:The Small Back Room (1949),Gone to Earth,The Elusive Pimpernel (both 1950), andThe Tales of Hoffmann (1951).

Launder and Gilliat joined the company and madeThe Happiest Days of Your Life (1950, a particular success),State Secret (1950),Lady Godiva Rides Again (1951),Folly to Be Wise (1953),The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan (1953, a flop) andThe Belles of St. Trinian's (1954, a big hit).

The company had success withThe Wooden Horse (1950).Joseph Janni madeHoneymoon Deferred (1951).

Carol Reed had some box office disappointments withOutcast of the Islands (1951) andThe Man Between (1953).Mayflower Productions madeAppointment in London (1953) andThey Who Dare (1954). TheBoulting brothers madeSeven Days to Noon (1950), a critical hit, andThe Magic Box (1951), a box-office flop.

Receivership

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In 1954, the NFFC loaned British Lion £1 million. In 1955, it loaned a further £969,000.[14]

The company suffered from the commercial failure of several films, in particularThe Story of Gilbert and Sullivan andThe Beggar's Opera (both 1953).[15]

In June 1954, the NFFC it had lost its entire share capital of £1,208,000 and a substantial part of its government loan of £3 million. The NFFC made a reported loss of £1 million (US$2.8 million).[16]

In June 1954, the Conservative government effectively bailed out the company by placing it in receivership. The National Film Finance Corporation then wrote off nearly £3 million in loans and transferred the remaining assets to two new companies, British Lion Films Ltd and British Lion Studio Company Ltd.[17]

When the company was reorganised, Korda was asked who should take over running. Korda replied, "This is a very difficult problem. You see, I don't grow on trees."[18]

Korda succeeded in raising fresh finance before dying in January 1956.[19][20]

In January 1955, Launder, Gilliat and the Boulting brothers formed a new company, British Lion Films Ltd., which took over the running of Shepperton as well as British Lion's distribution business. They releasedThe Constant Husband (1955) which became a box office success. Also popular wereGeordie (1955),The Green Man (1956),The Smallest Show on Earth (1957) andBlue Murder at St Trinian's (1957).

The Boultings madeJosephine and Men (1955),Private's Progress (1956) (a big hit),Brothers in Law (1957) andLucky Jim (1957).

Other British Lion films from this period includedJohn and Julie,Stolen Assignment (both 1955),Charley Moon,A Hill in Korea (both 1956),My Teenage Daughter (1956; from Wilcox),The Birthday Present (1957),Orders to Kill,The Salvage Gang,Behind the Mask, andThe Solitary Child (all 1958).

In 1956, the Conservative government invested an extra $1.68 million in the company and lost half of that within two years.[21][22]

New management

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In March 1958, five producers were invited to run it with the intention of restoring British Lion's fortunes, and then, eventually, selling it back to the public. The producers invited were Launder and Gilliat, John and Roy Boulting andJames Woolf. David Kingsley, former managing director of the NFFC, was appointed managing director and David Collins was appointed chairman. The NFFC had voting control and £600,000 in shares (at £1 per share). The producers were allowed to buy 180,000 deferred shares.[23][24] James Woolf eventually retired, but the other producers formed the core of operations who turned around British Lion's performance. The government invested an extra $1.8 million.[12]

The new management was successful making over 80 films and paying back most of the $1.8 million.[12]

Launder and Gilliatt, who had madeFortune Is a Woman (1957) for Columbia, returned to British Lion to makeLeft Right and Centre (1959). AlthoughThe Bridal Path (1959) was a disappointment, they had a series of successful comedies, includingThe Pure Hell of St Trinian's (1961) andOnly Two Can Play (1962) with Peter Sellers.

TheBoulting brothers madeHappy Is the Bride (1958),Carlton-Browne of the F.O. (1959), andA French Mistress (1960), and had considerable success withI'm All Right Jack (1959) starring Sellers. They followed it withSuspect (1960).

Other movies from British Lion at this time includedExpresso Bongo (1959),Subway in the Sky (1959),Make Mine a Million (1959),Model for Murder (1959),Honeymoon (1959; fromMichael Powell),Jet Storm (1959),Cone of Silence (1960),Light Up the Sky! (1960) andThe Boy Who Stole a Million (1960).

The company also partnered withBryanston Films to distribute such films asThe Entertainer (1960), which was a commercial disappointment, andSaturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), a huge hit.

In March 1960, British Lion recorded a profit of £126,771.[25] The following year this was £318,285, then £426,098, enabling the company to pay a dividend; Shepperton Studios also announced a profit of £114,032, compared to £54,298 the previous year.[26]

Other films from this period includedThe Wind of Change (1961),Double Bunk (1961),Spare the Rod (1961),Offbeat (1961), andA Matter of Choice (1963). In March 1963, the company had profits of £468,910.[27]

Forced sale

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In December 1963, the Conservative government bought a controlling interest in British Lion by forcing the private directors either to sell their interest in the company (for $420,000 for shares they bought for $5,000), or to pay the government by offering $4.2 million (£1.6 million). The argument was the company should be run privately not by the government.[21][23]

A variety of buyers were interested, including SirMichael Balcon,Lew Grade,Sydney Box,Morecambe and Wise andSam Spiegel.[28] The forced sale was controversial because management of British Lion was generally held to have been successful and profitable, and the company was a vital source of locally financed British films at a time when the industry was dominated by American finance and two cinema chains, Rank andABC.[29][30] The original directors made a capital gain of £741,000.[14] The company was going to be sold to Sydney Box, who was associated with Rank. Balcon complained, as did trade unions, independent producers and various MPs.[31]

Films from this period includedThe Comedy Man,Ring of Spies, andDo You Know This Voice? (all 1964).

Syndicate takes over

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In March 1964, a syndicate acquired a controlling interest in the company from the National Film Finance Corporation for $4,452,000 (£1.6 million). This syndicate consisted of Michael Balcon,Woodfall Films (Tony Richardson andJohn Osborne), the Boultings, Launder and Gilliat,Joseph Janni andJohn Schlesinger, and Walter Reade. It was intended that there should be five different production units within the company.[32][33][34]

Several months later, the company started making movies again, such asJoey Boy (1965) from Launder/Gilliat,Rotten to the Core (1965) from the Boultings, andModesty Blaise.[35]Modesty Blaise ended up being taken over by20th Century Fox.

In August 1965, the company announced that pretax profits fell from £280,543 to £194,741.[36] In September 1965,Lord Goodman of theArts Council was appointed chairman. The board consisted of Balcon, Roy Boulting, David Kingsley, Gilliatt, Richardson and Peter Cooper.[37]

The board of British Lion asked for the government to buy the company back but this was refused. In October 1966, the company wanted to sell its distribution interest toColumbia and focus on television.[38]

In late 1966 Sir Michael Balcon led a take over attempt of the company. However, by December this had been rejected. That month the company announced a half yearly jump of profits from £82,000 to £218,000, mostly due to the strong box office performances ofMorgan andThe Great St Trinians Train Robbery/[39][40] The Boultings'The Family Way (1966), from British Lion, was the only film made in Britain over a 12-month period financed entirely by British capital.[41]

In October 1967, five-sixths of the company was owned byMax Rayne (who recently bought a one sixth interest from Walter Reade), the Boultings (who bought out a one eighth holding once owned by Tiberian Films), Launder and Gilliat, and Lord Goodman, with institutional investors owning the rest.[42] Profits for the year 1967/68 were £152,514. Joseph Janni and Roy Boulting resigned as directors of the studio board and were replaced by Max Rayne and John Boulting

In 1968, to raise new finance, the studio's financial advisers, Hambros Bank, recommended British Leion go public. In December 1968 British Lion Holdings went public, offering over one million shares. The company made a profit that year of £247,000, its releases including the Boultings'Twisted Nerve (1968).[43] By 1969, John Boulting had 354,000 shares, Roy Boulting 366,000 and Lord Goodman 155,000. In 1969, the company made a profit of £575,679.[44]

Downturn

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The British industry suffered a crisis in the late 1960s due to a combination of factors, particularly the withdrawal of American film money from the UK, reduced funding for the NFFC and a decline in the cinema-going audience. British Lion attempted to diversify into other areas. Around £500,000 was spent on extra equipment to be hired to British television companies, only to discover an over-supply of such equipment on the market. At attempt to enter the world of publishing was unsuccessful. They bought the cinema advertising businessPearl & Dean in August 1970, but it failed to make major profits.[45]

In January 1970, John Boulting was optimistic about the company but wanted an injection of government money of £5 million.[46] In 1970, Gilliat stepped down as chairman of Shepperton Studios to focus on filmmaking.[47] His last film for the company would beEndless Night (1972) withHayley Mills. For the year ended March 1971, the company made a profit of £137,273.[44]

In November 1971, British Lion, then valued £2.7 million, attempted a take over of the Star Cinema chain, valued £9.2 million.[44] The bid was unsuccessful.[48]

In March 1972, the company reported a loss of £1 million.[45]

Barclay securities

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In April 1972, Barclay Securities, headed by John Bentley, bid £5.4 million for British Lion, and the board – by that stage consisting of Lord Goodman, Sir Max Rayne, John and Roy Boulting and Sidney Gilliat – accepted. British Lion owned a considerable property portfolio including Shepperton.[49][50] £2 million was for the film library, £1.8 million for the land of the studios, and the rest for Pearl and Dean.

Bentley was known at the time for buying businesses,shutting them down and selling off the real estate.[51] By this stage, Shepperton was losing money and Barclay wanted to sell off part of the land for real estate development. (The land was worth an estimated £3,500,000.)[52][53] The unions protested this, threatening to black ban the Boulting Brothers who were then making the filmSoft Beds, Hard Battles.[54][55]

Among British Lion films released around this time wereOoh... You Are Awful (1972). Bentley appointedPeter Snell managing director and he greenlit two films,The Wicker Man andDon't Look Now (1973).[56]

In September 1972, Barclays sold its own business, Mills and Allen, to British Lion.[57]

In November 1972, it was reported British Lion made a loss the previous year of £941,000 including a tax write off of £804,000 for unsuccessful films.[58]

Spikings and Deeley

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Barry Spikings andMichael Deeley were entrepreneurs with experience in filmmaking. They had a company with actorStanley Baker Greater Western Investments (GWI) and wanted to sell their main asset, a building, but wanted to avoid the high tax rate that came with real estate development. They decided to swap their shares in the company for shares in Lion International, the company that owned British Lion Films, Shepperton Studios, Pearl & Dean cinema advertisers, and Mills and Allen outdoor advertising. This would enable Lion to sell the building for cash, offsetting the profit against existing losses incurred by some of its subsidiaries.[59]

Deeley said there was opposition to GWI becoming involved in British Lion, especially from John Boulting, but eventually in January 1973 Deeley was appointed managing director of British Lion Films, and on the board of the company.[60] When he took over, two films had been greenlighted by Peter Snell and were in post production,Don't Look Now andThe Wicker Man.Don't Look Now was sold to Paramount butThe Wicker Man had a more difficult post production process, resulting it being re-edited; its commercial reception was poor but eventually it was considered a cult movie.[61]

British Lion made two films,The Internecine Project andWho?, both using the method of raising half the budget from American distributors, half through German tax shelter deals. The company then madeConduct Unbecoming andRansom.

In June 1975, British Lion was bought outright by Deeley and Spikings, by selling their interest in Lion International for British Lion Films.[62] They went on to makeThe Man Who Fell to Earth,Nickelodeon andAt the Earth's Core.[63] However Deeley and Spikings wanted to put the company on a more stable financial setting and sought interest from EMI Films.

EMI

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In May 1976, EMI Films paid £739,000 in cash and shares for the company.[64] In May 1977, British Lion officially ceased to trade. Deeley and Spikings were appointed to the board of EMI.[65]

Selected films produced or distributed by British Lion

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A =The Archers
I = Individual Pictures
LF =London Films

References

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  1. ^Hansard, 1 June 1954:British Lion Film Corporation (Appointment of Receiver) Linked 2014-07-25
  2. ^Hansard, 25 January 1955:British Lion Films Ltd. Linked 2014-07-25
  3. ^"With co0105973 (Sorted by Popularity Ascending)".IMDb.
  4. ^"FORTUNE LOST ON FILMS".Singleton Argus. New South Wales, Australia. 6 October 1923. p. 3. Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^"The THEATRE & its PEOPLE".Table Talk. No. 3118. Victoria, Australia. 9 February 1928. p. 20. Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  6. ^"Film Gossip from London".The Telegraph. Queensland, Australia. 14 May 1940. p. 20 (SECOND EDITION). Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  7. ^"Film Bid By Aged".The Sun. No. 11, 258. New South Wales, Australia. 21 February 1946. p. 13. Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^Pryor, Thomas M. (14 April 1946)."Korda Begins Fourth Film Phase".The New York Times. p. 51.
  9. ^Lejeune, C.A. (21 April 1946)."The Film Scene Along the Thames: Plans Altered The Korda Group Personal History".The New York Times. p. 51. Edward Black is referred to as Ted Black in C.A. Lejeune's article. Sound City Studios was an early name for Shepperton Studios.
  10. ^BRITISH LION FILM CORPORATION: ISSUE OF ORDINARY SHARES MR HUGH QUENNELL'S REVIEWThe Scotsman, 21 May 1946: 3.
  11. ^BRITISH LION FILM CORPORATION: MR HUGH QUENNELL'S REVIEWThe Scotsman (1921–1950); Edinburgh, Scotland [Edinburgh, Scotland] 21 May 1947: 3.
  12. ^abcHOW IT IS TO BE OR NOT TO BE IN BRITISH PRODUCTION By STEPHEN WATT.The New York Times, 2 February 1964: X7.
  13. ^"Big Loss Expected on Film Financing".The Age. No. 29, 630. Victoria, Australia. 15 April 1950. p. 6. Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^abcBritish Lion-A Solution Davenport, Nicholas. The Spectator; London Vol. 212, Iss. 7073, (17 January 1964): 85.
  15. ^"Big loss on films".The Telegraph. Queensland, Australia. 2 June 1954. p. 9 (LAST RACE). Retrieved7 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^BRITISH LION IS PUT INTO RECEIVERSHIP New York 2 June 1954: 38.
  17. ^The Robert Clark account: Films released in Britain by Associated British Pictures, British Lion, MGM, and Warner Bros., 1946–1957 Porter, Vincent. Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television; Dorchester-on-Thames Vol. 20, Iss. 4, (October 2000): 469–511.
  18. ^Sir Alexander Korda GILLIAT, SIDNEY; Greene, Graham; Richardson, Ralph. Sight and Sound; London Vol. 25, Iss. 4, (Spring 1956): 214.
  19. ^"U. K. PRODUCER DOES IT AGAIN".The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XIX, no. 102. New South Wales, Australia. 19 July 1954. p. 14. Retrieved7 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^FILM ACTIVITIES ALONG THE THAMES By STEPHEN WATTS.The New York Times, 19 February 1956: X5.
  21. ^abBritain Buys Film Distributor; Independent Producers ProtestBy JAMES FERON Special to The New York Times.The New York Times, 21 December 1963: 14.
  22. ^The Years of the Lion-I John; BOULTING, ROY.The Spectator; London Vol. 212, Iss. 7071, (3 January 1964): 5.
  23. ^abCarving up the Lion: FILMS Gilliatt, Penelope. The Observer 29 Dec 1963: 20.
  24. ^CURRENT ACTION ON BRITISH SCREEN FRONTS: British Lion's New Blood.The New York Times, 23 March 1958: X5.
  25. ^"British Lion Films Show Profit".The Canberra Times. Vol. 34, no. 9, 676. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 10 August 1960. p. 9. Retrieved5 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  26. ^First preference dividend from British Lion: NO PAYMENT ON DEFERREDThe Guardian, 3 July 1962: 14.
  27. ^The Years of the Lion-2John; BOULTING, ROY.The Spectator; London Vol. 212, Iss. 7072, (10 January 1964): 41
  28. ^British Lion rival may be formed.Ardagh, John.The Observer, 19 January 1964: 2.
  29. ^Battle for the Lion's share (2): FILMSGILLIATT, PENELOPE.The Observer, 5 January 1964: 23.
  30. ^Sixth bid made for British Lion: NFFC could retain interest. Our own Reporter.The Guardian, 6 January 1964: 2.
  31. ^'Civil war' in the film industry: Mr Box v. 'the five'. Our own Reporter.The Guardian, 31 December 1963: 14.
  32. ^Walter Reade Sterling Joins The British Lion Syndicate.The New York Times, 20 March 1964: 27.
  33. ^British Lion-curing the mange Davenport, Nicholas. The Spectator; London Vol. 228, Iss. 7506, (May 6, 1972): 709.
  34. ^Walter Reade Acquires Share of British Lion.The Wall Street Journal, 20 March 1964: 12.
  35. ^ENGLAND'S FILMMAKERS TAKE OFF IN NEW DIRECTIONSBy STEPHEN WATT.The New York Times, 6 September 1964: X5.
  36. ^Sharp setback for British Lion Films The Guardian 6 Aug 1965: 11.
  37. ^Lord Goodman to be British Lion chairmanThe Guardian 15 September 1965: 3.
  38. ^British Lion turns to TVEvans, Kay. The Observer 16 October 1966: 14.
  39. ^WILL BRITISH LION EVER ROAR AGAIN? Eglin, Roger. The Observer 11 Dec 1966: 7.
  40. ^British Lion turns down offer The Guardian 3 December 1966: 10.
  41. ^Bowling Over Mr. BoultingLos Angeles Times 17 July 1967: c19.
  42. ^Where does British Lion go from here?BOULTING, JOHN. The Guardian 4 October 1967: 14
  43. ^British Lion easily beats forecast The Guardian 5 July 1969: 12.
  44. ^abcBritish Lion takeover of Star cinema chainDavenport, Andrew. The Guardian 3 Nov 1971: 17.
  45. ^abIn the PictureSight and Sound; London Vol. 42, Iss. 1, (Winter 1972): 23.
  46. ^The very last laugh? Barker, Dennis. The Guardian 7 January 1970: 8.
  47. ^British Lion keepersRichmond, Theo; GILLIAT, SYDNEY; Launder, Frank. The Guardian 28 September 1970: 8.
  48. ^City comment: Oriental adventure Slater, Walker; The Guardian 10 March 1972: 15.
  49. ^British Lion board backs £5M offerDavenport, Andrew. The Guardian 25 April 1972: 19.
  50. ^Barclay pays £5m. to acquire British Lion. The Irish Times 25 April 1972: 14.
  51. ^Toy plant deal gives £2M profitDavenport, Andrew. The Guardian 7 June 1972: 17.
  52. ^Local Residents May Take Over Shepperton Lot Variety; Los Angeles Vol. 268, Iss. 11, (25 October 1972): 31
  53. ^Talks on studios' future Barker, Dennis. The Guardian 12 April 1972: 10
  54. ^Boulting threat to halt films Barker, Dennis. The Guardian 19 Mar 1973: 1.
  55. ^Fight to keep film studiosOur own Reporter. The Guardian 11 November 1972: 4.
  56. ^Snell Rolls 'Wicker Man' On Scot Sites For BLVariety; Los Angeles Vol. 268, Iss. 11, (25 October 1972): 31.
  57. ^Associated Portland lifts profit £0.8m. in half year Pritchard, Charles. The Irish Times 29 September 1972: 15.
  58. ^City commentThe Guardian 9 November 1972: 15.
  59. ^Deeley p 96-97
  60. ^Deeley p 97
  61. ^Deeley p 105-106
  62. ^£1m. bid for studio likelyThe Irish Times 11 June 1975: 14.
  63. ^British money is suddenly big in Hollywood,'right up with Fox and Warner.'Mills, Bart. The Guardian 2 September 1977: 8.
  64. ^Acquisitionof B LionThe Guardian 19 May 1976: 18.
  65. ^The final fade-out for British LionBarker, Dennis. The Guardian 14 May 1977: 2.

Notes

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