Michael Bond quotes:

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  • I worked on 'Blue Peter' and 'Tonight' and lots of TV plays, filmed people like Rudolf Nureyev and Ted Heath, and ended up a senior cameraman with my own crew. I'd had my first short story published in 1947, and when my writing really started to take off I decided to go freelance, and eventually left the BBC in 1965.

  • Every small boy wanted to be a steam engine driver when they grew up in the old days, including me. There's something very special about them - the noise, the smell, the steam coming out everywhere.

  • Paddington Bear was a refugee with a label - 'Please look after this bear. Thank you', and he had a little suitcase.

  • In 1941, the BBC was setting up local, low-powered transmitters that were switched off if there was an air raid so they couldn't be used by German planes to navigate. As a 'youth in training,' my job was to switch the transmitter on in the mornings and off at night, and to check that it, and the feeder land lines, were working.

  • As a cameraman, I was paid to stand within a few feet of Yehudi Menuhin performing. I saw Rudolph Nureyev dancing. I couldn't believe I was being paid for that.

  • My daughter Karen was born in 1958, the year my first Paddington book came out, so she grew up with him.

  • The great advantage of having a bear as a central character is that he can combine the innocence of a child with the sophistication of an adult.

  • I have a flat in Paris and go there a lot, but the Eurostar's much more civilised than flying.

  • It's nice having a bear about the house.

  • After the war, I went to the BBC monitoring service in Caversham, a suburb of Reading. It was a big aerial system to listen to radio programmes all over the world.

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