Description
Norman Quick
Mr. Quick was born in Toronto, Ontario on April 22, 1921. His father, a cinematographer, moved the family to Ottawa when he was very young and he remembers in particular, playing a lot of hockey wearing homemade equipment. Mr. Quick enlisted in the Medical Corps, but quickly transferred to the Film and Photo Corps once it was formed in England. His active service took him to Italy, where he filmed such notable actions as Ortona and Monte Cassino. Interestingly, he and his crew adopted a teenage boy named Ilio, who accompanied the Canadian film crew until its tour in Italy ended. Mr. Quick was then deployed to NW Europe, where he served in France, Belgium, Holland and Germany. He remained in the Canadian Army as a cinematographer, but left after Paul Hellyer amalgamated Canada’s Armed Forces. Mr. Quick currently resides in Ottawa, Ontario.
Transcript
Every cameraman had to go after the unit. We had to go to Pinewood Studios to the British Army Film and Photo Unit who were Veterans of the African campaign and they taught us things ... what to do and how to shoot it without getting killed. How to take cover and, you know, and dig in and don’t stick your head up too. If there was a bush that you could get your camera through, your lenses through or things like that you know ... just around the corner of a building or through a window or things like that you know ... just to protect yourself. Didn’t always work I can tell you. Didn’t always work.