• Source: Highbury Studios
    • The Highbury Studios were a British film studio located in Highbury, North London which operated from 1937 until 1956. The studios were constructed by the producer Maurice J. Wilson. During its early years, the studio was hired out to independent production companies.


      Credits


      Mrs Pym of Scotland Yard


      Highbury Productions


      Following the Second World War, Highbury was acquired by the Rank Organisation which used it to make low-budget second features featuring the company's rising actors. The studio was run by the producer John Croydon, who had previously worked at Ealing. Its aim was to make 50 minute "curtain raisers" for Rank's features. John Croydon was head of production. It frequently used members of Rank's Company of Youth.
      In December 1948 the studio operation was shut down as part of a series of cuts made throughout the Rank Organisation, which had suffered heavy financial losses.


      = Select credits

      =
      A Song for Tomorrow (1948) – directed by Terence Fisher
      Trouble in the Air (1948)
      Penny and the Pownall Case (1948) – with Diana Dors, Christopher Lee
      Colonel Bogey (1948) – directed by Terence Fisher
      To the Public Danger (1948) – directed by Fisher, with Dermot Walsh and Susan Shaw
      Fly Away Peter (1948)
      Love in Waiting (1948) – with David Tomlinson
      A Piece of Cake (1948)
      Badger's Green (1949)
      Stop the Merry-Go-Round (1952)


      Later use


      Occasional films were still made there by other companies, and it became increasingly used as a television studio. It made a number of commercials.


      Bibliography


      Macnab, Geoffrey. J. Arthur Rank and the British Film Industry. Routledge, 1994.
      Warren, Patricia. British Film Studios: An Illustrated History. Batsford, 2001.


      References




      External links


      Highbury Productions at BFI
      Highbury Productions at IMDb

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