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Lime Grove Studios : ウィキペディア英語版 | Lime Grove Studios Lime Grove Studios was originally a film studio complex built by the Gaumont Film Company in 1915, but it was later purchased by the BBC who used it for television broadcasts from 1949 to 1991.〔(History of TV Studios – Lime Grove – accessed 18 February 2010 )〕 It was situated in Lime Grove, a residential street in Shepherd's Bush, west London, and was described by Gaumont, when it first opened, as "the finest studio in Great Britain and the first building ever put up in this country solely for the production of films". Many Gainsborough Pictures films were made here from the early 1930s. Its sister studio was Islington Studios, also used by Gainsborough. Films were often part shot at both Islington and Lime Grove. The complex was demolished in 1993.〔 ==Gaumont-British Picture Corporation== In 1922, Isidore Ostrer along with brothers Mark and Maurice, acquired control of Gaumont-British from its French parent. In 1932 a major redevelopment of Lime Grove Studios was completed, creating one of the best equipped studio complexes of that era. The first film produced at the remodeled studio was the Walter Forde thriller ''Rome Express'' (1932), which became one of the first British sound films to gain critical and financial success in the United States (where it was distributed by Universal Pictures). The studios prospered under Gaumont-British, and in 1941 were bought by the Rank Organisation. By then, Rank had a substantial interest in Gainsborough Pictures and ''The Wicked Lady'' (1945), among other Gainsborough melodramas, was shot at Lime Grove.
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