During the second half of the shoot, we were doing a night shoot on some steps in Plaka, going up towards the Acropolis, and suddenly there was some sort of fuss, and the police arrived and it transpired that we'd been denounced. Cacoyannis and I were both foreigners, because Cacoyannis was a Cypriot, and in theory we needed work permits, which we didn't have. So somebody denounced us, actually it turned out to be a jealous technician who had not been offered a job on the movie. And he denounced us and we were arrested for working without a permit, and we were carted off to jail, and we actually saw the inside of the jail, but only for half an hour or so, because Cacoyannis said, 'Well don't worry, I'll...' you know, but unfortunately, it was the night that Field Marshall Papagos died. Field Marshall Papagos was the head of the government in those days. It was a sort of semi-dictatorship in '55. A democracy in theory but not in practice. And, because Papagos died that night everybody was running around in small circles wondering what's going to happen next, so Cacoyannis couldn't immediately contact the lawyer who couldn't immediately contact the police chief to get us out. But we were got out. But not entirely, we were half released into the custody of the police, who said, look, unfortunately due to the circumstances we can't let you go home, so very regretfully, they said, would you mind spending the night on the floor of the police station, we will give you some mattresses and so on. So we spent the night on the floor of the police station. Then a couple of days later, or the very next day, I can't remember, there was a wonderful trial. We were all brought to court and Cacoyannis had hired his lawyer, or it was his lawyer who came, and he made a wonderful speech saying... with gestures and shouting and sort of saying, 'Mr Cacoyannis and Mr Lassally, they're not workmen, they're artists! Artists don't need work permits!' And we were released.