Stars of the screen
Find out which historic houses and dramatic landscapes you can see on-screen, from popular TV dramas to brand new films.
Far from the Madding Crowd is a 2015 British romantic drama adapted from Thomas Hardy’s literary classic about farm owner Bathsheba Everdene played by actor Carey Mulligan. Find out how Claydon in Buckinghamshire was transformed into a filming location for the story to unfold.
Far From the Madding Crowd tells the story of farm owner Bathsheba Everdene (Carey Mulligan), and her relationships with three suitors – sheep farmer Gabriel Oak (Matthias Schoenaerts), soldier Sergeant Frank Troy (Tom Sturridge), and prosperous bachelor William Boldwood (Michael Sheen).
The film’s script, written by David Nicholls, was the fourth big-screen adaptation of the original 1874 novel by Thomas Hardy.
Claydon House’s remote location and lavish interiors provided the perfect setting to represent Boldwood’s mansion.
The grand 18th-century interiors offered an elegant backdrop for the filming of his Christmas party, one of the pivotal scenes in director Thomas Vinterberg’s adaptation of the classic Wessex tale.
Jane Randall was a volunteer at Claydon when filming took place and recalls the shoot. She said: ‘One of the most striking features was the attention to detail. There was a whole team engaged in gift-wrapping Boldwood’s presents to Bathsheba, dozens of Christmas trees dressed with ribbons and fruit decorations and a full Christmas dinner prepared in the volunteers’ tea-room.’
The remote location of Claydon made it an ideal place to film the story. ‘The lack of neighbouring buildings or main roads meant that you felt as if we had stepped back in time as soon as you turned into the drive,’ said the film’s location manager Alex Gladstone.
Apart from Claydon, much of the filming for the story took place in Hardy's home county of Dorset. In Higher Bockhampton, we also look after the small, thatched cottage where he was born and wrote Far from the Madding Crowd, which was his fourth novel.
A few miles away we care for Max Gate, the Dorchester home he designed in 1885, as well as the wild and windswept heathland at Slepe Heath, which is thought to have been the inspiration for Hardy’s fictional Egdon Heath in the novel The Return of the Native.
As well as showing off beautiful locations, filming directly benefits the places in our care that star in the production. The income from location fees goes straight back into conservation work to care for historic houses and landscapes, so that we’ll all be able to see them both on screen and in real life for years to come.
Find out which historic houses and dramatic landscapes you can see on-screen, from popular TV dramas to brand new films.
Many properties in our care have featured in TV and film adaptations of Jane Austen novels. Here’s a list of some of the best.
Thomas Hardy’s vividly imagined Wessex has enchanted readers of his novels for decades. Discover how the author brought the fictional county to life.
Many of the places in our care have been locations for films and TV dramas. Hear from two of our filming and location managers as they discuss the most popular filming locations and share their best stories from behind the scenes.
Fancy taking a break somewhere you've seen on screen? From The Secret Garden to Game of Thrones and Harry Potter, many of the places we care for have been filming locations for much-loved movies and TV shows.
Pick up a book from a second-hand bookshop to keep or share. Every purchase will raise funds for conservation projects at the places in our care.