Timothy Spall: ...at Sea

Timothy Spall at Sea series is a set of three BBC Four television series[2] that follows the voyage of actor Timothy Spall and his wife Shane as they take their Dutch barge, The Princess Matilda, on a circumnavigation around the British Coast, with visits to Northern Ireland and the Isle of Man.[3][4][5]

A broadly similar Dutch barge, (except The Princess Matilda has no raised aft cabin).[1]

The Princess Matilda was designed and built by Peter Nicholls Yacht Builders Ltd.[6] She is a 52-foot-long (16 m) 35-tonne steel-hulled seagoing Category B[7] Dutch barge.[8][9]

Series edit

Timothy Spall: Somewhere at Sea edit

This is the first series, though their trip from London to Cornwall was the first leg of their journey. The series comprised three programmes, covering their journey from Cornwall to the Bristol Channel and their winter mooring at Penarth in Cardiff Bay.[10] It was first broadcast during May 2010.[11]

Timothy Spall: Back at Sea edit

The second in the series comprised four programmes and covered the journey after the first winter's break. They travel around Wales to Liverpool, to the Isle of Man, Northern Ireland and Scotland. The last programme in this series follows them from the western Scottish Isles to winter port in Aberdeenshire via the Caledonian Canal and Loch Ness.[12] The series was first broadcast in August 2011.[13]

Timothy Spall: All at Sea edit

The third and final series in the set comprised four programmes, and covers the final leg of their journey. The final programme of the previous series left them needing a winter mooring in Eastern Scotland, and the first programme of this series tells of their winter mooring in Buckie and Banff, Aberdeenshire.[14] This series follows them from Scotland to London, via North East England, the East of England, the River Medway and Chatham, and an RNLI RIB arrives to help finishing with their return up the River Thames. In August 2011, whilst filming an episode in the River Medway estuary, Spall and his wife became lost and had to be guided in by the Sheerness lifeboat. Arthur Ormesher and Nicki Wood were among the RNLI crew who escorted his barge to Queenborough Harbour.[15][16]

The series was first broadcast in February and March 2012.[17]

Further reading edit

  • The Voyages of The Princess Matilda - Shane Spall - Ebury Press - 2012 - ISBN 9780091941802
  • The Princess Matilda Comes Home - Shane Spall - Ebury Press - 2014 - ISBN 9780091941826

References edit

  1. ^ Images of "The Princess Matilda"
  2. ^ Note: This TV documentary series is made by the same team who make Escape to the Chateau for Channel 4 that features Dick Strawbridge and his wife Angel.
  3. ^ Wollaston, Sam (10 August 2011). "TV review: Timothy Spall: Back at Sea; Who Do You Think You Are?; Village SOS". The Guardian. London.
  4. ^ Last Night's TV: Wallis Simpson: the Secret Letters/Channel 4
    Timothy Spall: Back at Sea/BBC4 - Reviews, TV & Radio - The Independent
  5. ^ 00:02 Comments By Jane Simon (10 August 2011). "Timothy Spall: Back at Sea - BBC4, 8.30pm". mirror. Retrieved 6 March 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Peter Nicholls
  7. ^ Boat Categories A, B, C & D were established by the EU's Recreational Craft Directive (RCD)
  8. ^ BoatShed
  9. ^ Note: The Princess Matilda was commissioned and was built (without a wheelhouse) at a cost of £200,000 in May 2010. Now, with a wheelhouse, she is valued at £350,000,
  10. ^ "Race Against the Tide". BBC. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  11. ^ "Timothy Spall: Somewhere at Sea". BBC. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  12. ^ "Scotch Mist". BBC. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  13. ^ "Timothy Spall: Back at Sea". BBC. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  14. ^ Timothy Spall (2011). Message in a Bottle. BBC. Event occurs at 03:38. before we came to Banff we were in Buckie
  15. ^ "Actor Timothy Spall rescued by Sheerness lifeboat". BBC. 25 August 2011. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  16. ^ "RNLI rescues actor Timothy Spall". BBC News. 25 August 2011.
  17. ^ "Timothy Spall: All at Sea". BBC. Retrieved 2 October 2012.

External links edit