Whether it is fantasy films or period dramas, the Harrogate district has become a hotspot for film crews to shoot big productions.
This past year has seen Harrogate town centre and Fountains Abbey play host to major film and television stars, including Simon Pegg and Bridgeton star Phoebe Dynevor.
Earlier this week, Pegg was spotted shooting a scene for his upcoming film Nandor Fodor and The Talking Mongoose on Crown Place.

Simon Pegg filming in Harrogate on Monday.
While the district can offer picturesque scenes for Netflix and film productions, local industry officials say there is more to Harrogate which attracts crews.
Film crews love Harrogate
Chris Hordley is production liaison and development manager at Screen Yorkshire, a body which helps production companies film projects in the region.
The organisation helps major films get off the ground in Yorkshire by giving them location options and helping find crew members to support shooting scenes.
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Mr Hordley said while Harrogate is a perfect place for fantasy films, period dramas and other series, its hospitality is part of the reason why production teams keep coming back.
“They love it.
“A lot of the feedback we get is that it is well placed for hotels. If they [the crew] are not from Yorkshire, they get places to stay over.
“They will say to us: ‘I loved it so much that I booked a weekend for my family’. We get that a lot.”
He added that the ability to get from the centre of Harrogate to another location, such as Newby Hall near Ripon, in a short space of time was also part of the appeal.
“You can also get to lots of interesting locations in a short time. It’s a good place.”
More productions to come
Areas of the district have hosted many major productions over the years.
The Nidd Gorge viaduct was used to film a scene in Paddington 2 and Plumpton Rocks and Fountains Abbey feature in the The Witcher, a popular Netflix series.

Plumpton Rocks and Fountains Abbey both star in The Witcher.
Mr Hordley said Screen Yorkshire has a database of around 1,500 locations in the region, which they offer to production companies.
This includes landscapes, historic buildings, private businesses and major cities like Leeds and York.
Mr Hordley added that Yorkshire and Harrogate is often used to portray a different place because of the history and heritage locations.
“A lot of what we do is portraying Yorkshire as somewhere else.
“Yorkshire and Harrogate is really good for storytelling for past and present, feature and fantasy.”
All Creatures Great and Small
Mr Hordley pointed to All Creatures Great and Small, which is filmed mainly in Grassington but also in Harrogate as an example of a successful historical series that has put the district on the map.
More recently, Simon Pegg’s upcoming film, Nandor Fodor and The Talking Mongoose is a film based on the story of the para-psychologist from the 1930s and was shot in Harrogate.
When asked whether people in the Harrogate district can expect to be on television screens more in the future, he said:
MPs told 2014 Tour De France has not boosted Yorkshire tourism“You absolutely can.
“We have been working hard on more projects. There are projects that will be happening in Harrogate.”
Over 300,000 people lined the streets of the Harrogate district for the 2014 Tour De France Grand Depart, but MPs have been told the event has provided no lasting benefits to the region.
The Grand Depart saw riders given a royal send-off by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry at Harewood House.
Almost 200 cyclists took part, racing through Masham, Ripon and Killinghall before a sprint finish in Harrogate. It memorably saw Mark Cavendish crash off his bike on Parliament Street.
Since the event, other major cycling events have been held in the Harrogate district, including the 2019 UCI Cycling Championships, which has divided the town ever since.
At an MPs select committee on Tuesday, Caroline Cooper Charles, chief executive of Screen Yorkshire, which champions the film and TV industry in Yorkshire, gave evidence about promoting the UK as a tourist destination.
Asked by Labour MP Clive Efford if the Grand Depart had a lasting impact on tourism in the county, she replied:
“In all honesty, I don’t think it did.
“It certainly put the spotlight on Yorkshire and people came to see the race. Probably for a short amount of time hotels were booked up and restaurants were full. In terms of long term impact no, I wouldn’t say so.”
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In 2014, Gary Verity, then chief executive of Welcome to Yorkshire, the tourism body that played a major role in bringing the event to Yorkshire, said the event “will have a lasting impact on visitor numbers and businesses for years and years to come”.
But Ms Cooper Charles said Yorkshire as a county had failed to capitalise on the success of the event.
A Harrogate Borough Council report published in 2015 claimed £19m was spent in the district thanks to the race. A Welcome to Yorkshire report claimed £100m was spent across the county.
Ms Cooper Charles said:
“Once the bikes are gone, what’s left? It’s the roads.
“In terms of a campaign to sell the rest of Yorkshire around the Tour de Yorkshire leg, i don’t think that happened. If it happened there would have been a longer-term impact.”
The Stray Ferret asked Welcome to Yorkshire to respond but we did not receive a response by the time of publication.