Bridgerton fans who want to retrace the steps of Queen Charlotte and Farmer George’s epic love story can now do just that.
Blenheim Palace has launched a film trail dedicated to the Netflix mega hit.
The 300-year-old estate, in Oxfordshire, was used as the Location for the young couple’s home.
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It set the stage for the exceptional final ball scene, where the duo – played by Golda Rosheuvel and James Fleet – danced in front of their subjects to a classical rendition of’ I Will Always Love You’ by Whitney Houston.
“We have nothing to equal this,” the real-life King George III reportedly said to Queen Charlotte on their first visit to Blenheim Palace in 1786.
Fans of watching Regency-era high society seduction and scandal unfold can walk through the Long Library, visit the room where Lady Danbury played chess and wander the same gardens as the Featherington sisters.
The palace first appeared in Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story as Buckingham House.
But it has since been featured for the first time in Bridgerton in series three.
The new film trail lets visitors follow in the footsteps of the infamous cast and experience the original filming Locations, as reported by What’s The Jam.
The route guides Bridgerton fans over to the Great Court, which was adorned with royal guards and opulent carriages while filming Queen Charlotte.
Many of the lavish scenes from the hit prequel series viewers see at Buckingham House are included in the new film trail.
For example, the Water Terraces, which were magically transformed into the enchanting outdoor space for the final ball scene in Queen Charlotte.
The film trail also leads visitors to wander through the exquisite State Rooms of Blenheim Palace, including the Long Library which appears twice in episode seven of the most recent Bridgerton season.
Fans can visit the Saloon, another room that played an integral part of the story, where Queen Charlotte and Lady Danbury are seen playing an intense game of chess as the Queen tries to work out who Lady Whistledown is.
Blenheim Palace is featured again in the most recent series when the two older Featherington sisters are seen strolling around the Water Terraces with their husbands in the final episode.
Visitors can even take a selfie surrounded by a stunning archway adorned with wisteria.
The site was at the top of Queen Charlotte supervising __cpLocation manager Tony Hood’s wish list.
He told Tatler: “It took me quite a lot of time to get in there but I managed to do it.
“Blenheim Palace is our ‘big jewel’ in the crown.
“It was quite a fabulous place.
“It’s Queen Charlotte’s world, and it looks fantastic.”
Blenheim Palace is also the birthplace of one of Britain’s most famous leaders, Sir Winston Churchill, and it was his father who described the vista, on entering the Estate from the village of Woodstock, as the “finest view in England”.
The trail experience is available until 30 September.
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