Earlier this year, the Dr took me to stay at
Grim's Dyke house – now a hotel – in Harrow Weald, which was used as a location in episodes 3, 4 and 5 of the 1967
Doctor Who story
The Evil of the Daleks. What follows is an expanded version of material from my
Black Archive book examining that story, plus photos from our visit...
It was production assistant Tim Combe who found the house. "I was living in Richmond when I got married in 1965," he told me. "But we were thinking of moving to north London, and I did quite a lot of looking round houses, going to estate agents and generally just driving around. I think I first saw it then."
The BBC's Written Archive Centre holds six production files for
The Evil of the Daleks, and the first of these - file T5/2,531/1 - shows that Combe visited Grim's Dyke again on 6 April 1967 to check its potential for
Doctor Who. That was also when he spotted the adjacent field used for the scenes of Kennedy snooping on the Doctor in episode 1; he learned who owned that field by asking in the local pub. On 7 April, Rae Pickthrone, an assistant in the BBC's television finance department, agreed a fee of £120 for the use of Grim's Dyke with Mr Sewell, the engineer and surveyor for the Borough of Harrow, covering the location filming that would take place at Grim's Dyke on 20, 24 and 25 April.
Grim's Dyke was built between 1870 and 1872, designed by architect Norman Shaw for the painter Frederick Goodall. Shaw had already made his name pioneering a particular style of old English house with a Gothic influence – evident in Grim's Dyke, especially in distinctive Gothic arches that can be seen in the photographs above.
After the Goodall family sold the house in 1880, it passed to the banker Robert Herriot and then to the librettist WS Gilbert – of Gilbert and Sullivan fame. He had a boating lake constructed there, in which he swam every day – and in which he died in 1911. His widow lived on at Grim's Dyke until her death in 1936, after which the house was put up for auction.
"Officially, whatever role the house played in the 2nd World War is classified, and not due for release until the 2040s," says the
Grim's Dyke hotel website. So, fittingly for
Doctor Who, it's a house of secrets. After the war, the house was used as a rehabilitation centre for men suffering from tuberculosis; that centre closed in 1963, and when Tim Combe arrived in 1967 the house was out of use.
That made it perfect for filming; the sources in what follows are IMDB unless otherwise listed. A year after the rehabilitation centre closed, young film-makers Kevin Brownlow and Andrew Mollo used Grim's Dyke as a location in their war film
It Happened Here (1965), as detailed on
Reel Streets.
In November 1965 it was used for the colour pilot episode of the adventure series
The Saint,
The Russian Prisoner, broadcast by ATV London and ATV Midlands in October 1966. The same series returned to the house for
The Fiction Makers, filmed from the week of 20 May to the week of 17 June 1966 but not broadcast on TV until December 1968 (having failed to secure a release as a movie). [Source: p. 6 of Andrew Pixley's notes for
The Saint: Original Soundtrack.]
On 18 January 1967, director Anthea Browne-Wilkinson visited the house while scouting locations for
The Brown Hand, an episode of the anthology series
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. As the home of Sir Dominic Crabbe (in Wiltshire), filming took place on 30 January, with actors Keith Buckley and Michael Sheard arriving by horse-drawn carriage in day-for-night shots. [Source:
Conan Doyle: Mystery and Adventure by Mark Jones (2023), p. 171, based on the production file for
The Brown Hand held by the BBC's Written Archives Centre.]
A month after
Doctor Who filmed at Grim's Dyke,
The Champions used the house as a location in
The Mission, filmed during the weeks of 24 and 31 May 1967 – the first of four episodes filmed there. A month later, during the week of 21 June, the same series filmed
The Experiment with Grim's Dyke as one of the locations. In October, Grim's Dyke was used for
The Body Snatchers and in January/February 1968, it was used in
The Final Countdown. [Source: Michael Richardson's production notes for
The Champions DVD, Network, 2006.]
Grim's Dyke was a location used in the horror film
The Blood Beast Terror, which began filming on 7 August 1967, and
The Devil Rides Out, which began filming on 28 August the same year.
ETA: According to Irene Shubik's book
Play for Today: The Evolution of Television Drama (1975), production began in October 1967 on
House of Character, an episode of the
Wednesday Play broadcast on 10 January 1968. "The filming was done at Grims Dyke Manor (sic) and Ham House in thick fog,” remembered Shubik (p. 91).
Filming began on
The Curse of the Crimson Altar on 22 January 1968 [Source: Jonathan Rigby,
English Gothic, p. 178.] It's thought that this was the last film that Boris Karloff worked on (though not the last to be released). "During some rain-soaked sequences [while filming at Grim's Dyke]. Karloff contracted pneumonia, which can hardly have helped alleviate the emphysema which, on 2 February 1969, would kill him. " [Rigby, p. 179.]
As well as horror films, Grim's Dyke appears in the Academy award winning drama
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, which began filming on 29 April 1968.
On 13 June 1968, a 2nd unit crew from
The Avengers shot material for the episode
Game at Grim's Dyke. [Source: Michael Richardson's
Bowler Hats and Kinky Boots, p. 660.] Also in June 1968, filming took place on
But What a Sweet Little Room, an episode of
Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) and that series returned on 12 August to film material for
You Can Always Find a Fall Guy.
From 21 October to 7 November 1968, filming took place on
The Killing Bottle, an episode of
Journey to the Unknown. The series
Department S filmed a Grim's Dyke in April 1969 for the episode
The Bones of Byrom Blain. [Source: Michael Richardson's production notes on the
Department S DVD set.]
Another horror film,
Cry of the Banshee filmed from 20 October 1969. The comedy
Futtocks End seems to have been at Grim's Dyke later in the year. The murder mystery
Endless Night began filming on 7 June 1971, the TV series
The Adventurer began filming on
The Case of the Poisoned Pawn in autumn 1972, and in November filming was conducted on
K is for Killing, an episode of
Thriller.
It's worth listing these productions because they almost all use the house in a very different way to
Doctor Who. Most are set in the present, though
Cry of the Banshee is set in Elizabethan England,
The Blood Beast Terror in the 19th century,
The Devil Rides Out in the 1920s and
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in the 1930s. The house adds grandeur and elegance. Usually, it has been dressed and lit to appear at its best, but looking carefully we can see damage and wear: it's a faded grandeur, suggesting decay and decadence in the horror films, and in both
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie and
Futtocks End that the past – its bricks and its values – struggles to survive in the modern world.
In
Doctor Who, the state of the house suggests something ironic. Just as the first episode and half of
The Evil of the Daleks has genuine antiques that are nevertheless brand new, something similar is going on with the house. As it appears in the story, it is old and decayed, but – given events are set in 1866 – it ought to be brand new...