No Secret to Edinburgh’s appeal

Published on : Saturday, July 16, 2016

210-200x300Edinburgh’s New Town will be transformed into Victorian Soho this weekend, when The Secret Agent premieres on BBC television.VisitScotland, the national tourism organisation, says the new adaptation of Joseph Conrad’s political novel will help showcase the outstanding architecture of the UNESCO World Heritage Site to potential visitors.

 
Thistle Street Lane, which is situated between George Street and Queen Street, doubles for 19th-century London in the three-part series, which stars Toby Jones, Vicky McClure and Stephen Graham.Sets were also constructed at Newbattle Abbey in Midlothian, while Bakehouse Close in the Old Town, Gosford House in East Lothian and Hopetoun House in South Queensferry also feature.

 

Directed by Charles McDougall and produced by World Productions for BBC One, Jones plays Verloc, whose seedy Soho shop hides his role as an agent of the Russian Embassy, spying on a group of London anarchists.

 
Furious that Britain tolerates violent extremists, the Russians want Verloc to provoke a bomb outrage that will trigger a government crackdown. Caught between the Russians and the British police, Verloc drags his unsuspecting family into a tragic terror plot.Priscilla Parish, the series’ producer, said Edinburgh was able to provide “great period locations that arguably would be impossible to find in London”.

 
She added: “In Thistle St Lane, central Edinburgh, is a long cobbled street with similar proportions / size of buildings to 19th-century Soho. The location also gave us a network of streets which really opens up the world of Soho and gives a feeling of scale. David Roger designed shop fronts and filled them with goods: second-hand instruments, a pawn shop, a couple of pubs.

 

“Verloc’s shop was at one end of the street, and 150m away at the other end was a music hall from which all sorts of characters emerge. There is a bridge spanning the street with its facade covered in an advertisement for the real 19th-century cemetery Necropolis train. Then it was a matter of populating the streets with people and animals. The finishing touches came in the mix – a mixture of languages, industry and street-life.”

 
Jenni Steele, Film and Creative Industries Manager at VisitScotland, said: “The beauty of the New Town, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is that its preserved architecture lends itself perfectly to film-making – in this case doubling as Victorian London. Set-jetting is a hugely popular pastime and, with other stately homes around the Lothians also featuring, we hope that seeing these amazing locations in The Secret Agent inspires people to explore the historic areas of Edinburgh and the surrounding countryside.”

 

Source:-

Comments are closed.

arrow2Follow Us
 
facebook-logo  twitter-logo  LinkedIn_logo  stumbleupon-logo   rss_logo 

SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTER:

Email 
 

ADVERTISEMENT

    TRAVEL INDUSTRY EVENTS

    More Events...