The film Michael Parker (Letters, April 19) remembers being shot in Brighton in 1954 is Norman Wisdom's One Good Turn.

Norman plays the part of a worker at a Sussex orphanage, trying to raise funds for it, who enters a London-to-Brighton race and, to his surprise, wins.

It's no surprise to learn he loses his trousers on the way.

This film is one of the many featured in the Brighton On Film guided walk, which runs from the May Brighton Festival until August and includes all the locations and stories of feature films from Brighton Rock to the present day.

The web site brightonwalks.com has dates and details of tours.

The Brighton Herald carried a report of the filming of One Good Turn, saying: "Old ladies were pushing each other out of the way to get a better view of him... a husky, athletic press photographer was sent staggering by a charging woman in the eager rush... that's what the shy, rather pathetic looking Wisdom does to them."

I have not been able to see this film so if any readers have a copy they are willing to lend, I would be very grateful.

Stills from the film will form part of the Kiss And Kill film exhibition at the Brighton Museum when it re-opens next month, for which I am leading guided walks.

Joan Rice, cast as a schoolmistress, went on to make a couple more films, including Horror Of Frankenstein, before retiring to run an estate agency in Maidenhead in the Seventies.

-Glenda Clarke, Tourist Board Guide, Clover Way, Portslade