If Walls Could Talk ... History comes to life in new storytelling experience at Wentworth Woodhouse

VISITORS to Wentworth Woodhouse can now get a deeper insight into the fascinating history of the stately home thanks to a new sound and vision experience.

VISITORS to Wentworth Woodhouse can now get a deeper insight into the fascinating history of the stately home thanks to a new sound and vision experience.

Housemaids and manservants, and even the characters of an oil painting from the 1600s, are coming to life to talk to visitors in footage projected onto walls in the State Dining Room and onto gauze backdrops in other rooms and corridors. 

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If These Walls Could Talk takes families back in time to hear the inside story of King George V and Queen Mary's visit to Wentworth in 1912.

The King and Queen were guests of Earl Fitzwilliam but a day after their arrival, the Cadeby Colliery mining disaster occurred.

Moved by it, the royals insisted on making a visit to the scene and it made the headlines of the day.

The story was retold in the famous book about Wentworth Woodhouse, Black Diamonds by Catherine Bailey, and in the recent blockbuster movie, Downton Abbey. 

Now it is being told from a new perspective. 

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Servants gossip as they work and the children of the 1st Earl of Strafford recall the visit they witnessed from their portrait by Van Dyck, which hung in the State Dining Room for centuries.

 

A youngster takes in the new If These Walls Could Talk experience at Wentworth Woodhouse.

 

Their stories are full of true historical detail and are thanks to painstaking work by the research team at the Grade I listed mansion.

The pilot project uses the latest technology and has been made possible with the support of a £40,000 Respond and Reimagine Grant from Art Fund, the UK's national charity for art.

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If it is a hit with visitors, the Preservation Trust regenerating the house hopes to do more If Walls Could Talk historic storytelling.

Visitor Operations Manager Jennifer Booth dreamed up the concept. 

"Children love to explore our big, empty rooms and corridors but many leave without knowing much of our history," she said.

"I set out to create a way of telling one of the mansion's stories in a way that would surprise and delight families. Projection technology was the way for us to do it and it makes fabulous use of our stunning and spacious interiors."

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Award-winning Doncaster film-maker and multi-media specialist Wayne Sables captured the footage and employed Projection Mapping, a digital technique which utilises projected images, films and digital content.

West Yorkshire artists and drama practitioners Becky Newbould and Gemma Whelan, of the We Great Ladies, were involved from concept to creation and star in the footage. 

They cast and co-ordinated the actors, who include West Yorkshire amateurs Stanley Hirst (11), Violet Hudson (10) and Tilly James (16) as the Earl's children William Wentworth, Lady Anne and Lady Arabella.

Experienced scriptwriter Gemma wrote the script and Becky, whose background is in visual arts, embraced dipping back into history and consulting with Wentworth Woodhouse's research team to ensure period detail and costumes were as accurate as possible.

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Said Gemma: "We wanted to bring back to life the voices of the house that had stayed silent for many years and transport families back to a special time in history. The story is fun and engaging but also explains the huge class divide and empathises with the Cadeby mining tragedy, which brought the community together."

The experience can be seen by visitors on house and gardens admission tickets every Wednesday to Sunday. 

 

 

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