Walford

Walford
Bridge Street Café before its refurbishment in 2009
EastEnders location
Created by Tony Holland & Julia Smith
Genre Soap opera
Type London borough
Notable locations The Queen Victoria
Notable characters EastEnders characters

Walford is a fictional borough of east London in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. It is the primary setting for the soap.

EastEnders is filmed at Borehamwood in Hertfordshire, towards the north-west of London. Much of the location work is filmed in nearby Watford. It has been suggested that Watford was chosen for much of the exterior scenes due to its close proximity and the town's name being so similar to Walford. Thus, any stray road signs or advertising boards which are accidentally filmed in the back of shots will appear to read Walford. Locations used in Watford include most interior and exterior church scenes of various churches, the snooker club, the County Court and Magistrates' Courts courtrooms, and the cemetery (where most of the deceased characters are interred).

The name Walford is both a street in Dalston where one of the series' creators, Tony Holland, lived and a blend of Walthamstow, where Holland was born, and Stratford.[1] The suffix 'ford' is also found throughout East London, for example, Ilford and Chingford].[2] Walford's London postcode district is E20 (real East London postcode districts only went up to E18[3] until 2011, when E20 was introduced to serve the London 2012 Olympic Park[4]). Walford's fictional tube station, Walford East, is located on the EastEnders tube map in the position normally occupied by the real Bromley-by-Bow tube station.[5][6]

As part of 2010 Children In Need charity appeal, Walford became twinned with Weatherfield in a special programme uniting the two soaps EastEnders and Coronation Street called "East Street".

Locations within Walford

Albert Square

The main setting of EastEnders is Albert Square, where many of the characters reside. Central to the Square is the garden. The garden is home to Arthur Fowler's bench, which was placed there in memory of him. The bench is also known as the 'Bench of Tears', as it is often the place where characters will go and cry. One corner of the square is taken up by The Queen Victoria Public House.[7] There is a B&B and a car lot.[7] The square's design was based on Fassett Square in Dalston,[8] and was given the name Albert Square after Prince Albert. The Queen Victoria, was also given its name due to this. [9] The Queen Victoria public house, known to residents as the Queen Vic or simply 'The Vic', stands south of the square at number 46 Albert Square, where it joins with Bridge Street. East of the pub is a building with 2 flats and west of these in the southwest corner leads off to a walkway through to Turpin Way, on which the Walford Community Centre and Playground are found.[7] To the west of the Queen Vic, across the junction with Bridge Street, is the Beale house, 45 Albert Square. Next to that is 43 Albert Square. In the southwest corner of the square is number 41.[7] Between numbers 41 and 43 is Daisy Lane, a pathway connecting Albert Square to Victoria Square. Daisy Lane was named after the daughter of Series Designer Steven Keogh.[2] On the west edge of The Square there are two houses 18 and 20 Albert Square, which have been knocked through as a single property and then later separated again. It was previously Walford's B&B, 'Kim's Palace'. North of the old B&B is the rear of 55 Victoria Road. A row of five terraced houses line the north edge of Albert Square. The westernmost house is number 31. The property next door is split into two flats. Number 25 is the home of Dot Cotton (June Brown). The easternmost property in the terrace is number 23, which (thanks to Alfie Moon) was destroyed in September 2014 by a fire.[7][10] On the northeast edge of Albert Square is a car lot, south of which is another terrace of three elevated properties. The northernmost house is number 5. A road leads to the north at the northeast edge of the square, passing by the car lot. The middle house is 3 Albert Square. Most southerly of this terrace is number 1,[7] originally flats with the doctor's surgery on the ground floor, which later becomes a single house.

Bridge Street

The fruit and veg stall from Bridge Street Market

Bridge Street is the location of the street market and shops including the café, launderette and mini-supermarket. The café is originally named Al's Cafe and owned by Ali Osman (Nejdet Salih) and Sue Osman (Sandy Ratcliff), where they also operate the taxi firm OzCabs.[11] When Ali develops a gambling addiction, he is forced to sell the café to Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt), who manages it with his wife, Cindy Beale (Michelle Collins), until he sells the business to his mother, Kathy Beale (Gillian Taylforth).[11] Ian buys the café back following the birth of Kathy's son, Ben Mitchell (Matthew Silver), although loses the business when he becomes bankrupt years later.[11] Phil Mitchell (Steve McFadden) buys the property and employs Laura Beale (Hannah Waterman), the estranged wife of Ian, to manage it. She renames the property to Laura's Café.[11] Laura dies and Phil is falsely imprisoned so when Phil signs the café to his sister, Sam Mitchell (Kim Medcalf), she naïvely sells the business back to Ian.[11] Ian manages the café with his wife Jane Beale (Laurie Brett) until they divorce and Jane wins the business in the divorce settlement. Jane sells the café to Phil and he lets his partner, Shirley Carter (Linda Henry), manage it. She names the property Shirley's Cafe.[11] Phil sells the business to Ian, and he renames the café to Mandy's Café. When Ian has a nervous breakdown and leaves, his daughter Lucy Beale (Hetti Bywater) takes control of his businesses, calling the cafe Cindy's Café. Upon his return, Ian regains ownership of the café and when she returns to Walford, Jane manages it.[11] A few years later, Kathy returns and when she begins managing the café, Ian renames it to Kathy's Café.[11] A year later, Ian sells the property to Weyland & Co, a property development company, which upsets Kathy.[12] Weeks later, Fi Browning (Lisa Faulkner), a business consultant for the company, gifts the café to Kathy after discovering that her father, James Willmott-Brown (William Boyde) raped Kathy.[13]

Turpin Road

The exterior of the R&R nightclub as it looked in 2009

Turpin Road is the location of a war memorial, bookmaker, chip shop, funeral parlour, restaurant and an upmarket bar as well as several other businesses.[7] The name Turpin Road was chosen after the show's creators read that the East End was the haunt of notorious highwaymen, such as Dick Turpin.[2] The nightclub on Turpin Road is originally named Strokes Wine Bar until George Palmer (Paul Moriarty) buys it and renames it the Cobra Club. He uses the club as a cover for his criminal business.[14] Annie Palmer (Nadia Sawalha), George's daughter, takes over the control of the club when he leaves; she renames the club the Market Cellar. Annie later sells the club to Steve Owen (Martin Kemp), who renames it E20.[14] Under Steve's ownership, Saskia Duncan (Deborah Sheridan-Taylor) is killed in the club after a struggle with Steve and Matthew Rose (Joe Absolom).[14] Beppe di Marco (Michael Greco) and Billy Mitchell (Perry Fenwick) buy the club from Steve, although Beppe sells his majority share to Sharon Watts (Letitia Dean), who rebrands the club Angie's Den, in memory of her parents Angie Watts (Anita Dobson) and Den Watts (Leslie Grantham).[14] Following a refurbishment, Den buys into the business and co-owns with Sharon.[7] They sell the club to Johnny Allen (Billy Murray), who renames it Scarlet.[14] Johnny gives the club to his daughter, Ruby Allen (Louisa Lytton), when he is imprisoned.[7] The start of Stacey Slater (Lacey Turner) and Bradley Branning's (Charlie Clements) relationship begins in Scarlet when Bradley is falsely blamed for spiking Stacey's drink. A reporter from Inside Soap labelled the moment "a rather unromantic start to Stacey and Bradders' love story!"[14] Ronnie Mitchell (Samantha Womack) and Jack Branning (Scott Maslen) buy the club, renaming it the R&R - the initials of Ronnie and her sister, Roxy Mitchell (Rita Simons). Ronnie and Roxy run the club, while Jack operates as a silent partner.[7] When Ronnie and Jack separate, Ronnie sells her share of the club to Jack, although after a fire in the club, Ronnie and Roxy each buy a share in the club. When Billy tries to woo Carol Jackson (Lindsay Coulson), Carol's daughter Bianca Butcher (Patsy Palmer) becomes aggressive and creates an argument between them, Stacey, Janine Butcher (Charlie Brooks) and Kat Moon (Jessie Wallace). An Inside Soap columnist labelled the argument "one of our favourite catfights".[14] Jack is later shot at the club by gang member Kylie (Elarica Gallacher),[14] and a few months later, he sells his share of the club to Phil Mitchell.[7] Roxy and Ronnie also sell their shares to Janine Butcher (Charlie Brooks).[7] Upon her return to Walford, Sharon becomes the R&R's bar manager and she holds her wedding to Jack at the club. At the altar, Jack jilts Sharon, leaving her saddened.[14] Sharon is also offered a small share in the business by Phil. Janine and Sharon later sell their shares to Phil, leaving him as the sole owner.[14] The R&R is later closed and sold to a property developer; they return the club to Phil and Sharon decides to reopen it with Mel Owen (Tamzin Outhwaite) as the manager.[14] Mel plans to rename the club The Phoenix, but her son Hunter Owen (Charlie Winter) sabotages the refurbishment and rebrands it E20 in honour of his father, Steve.

George Street

The Argee Bhajee restaurant on George Street

George Street is the location of an Italian restaurant, Giuseppe's, which later becomes an Indian restaurant, Argee Bhajee, when a new owner takes over. Walford East tube station is on George Street,[7] which first appeared on screen in late 1985 when Lou Beale collapses outside it. On maps seen inside the station it replaces Bromley-by-Bow on the District line, but the building is in the style of those designed by Leslie Green, even though his work only appears on the Bakerloo, Northern, and Piccadilly lines.[15] The train sound was first heard in 1987 and the train's first appearance was in 1988 at Lou Beale's funeral. Trains did not appear again until 4 February 2010, when CGI was used in the show for the first time.[16] Platforms within the station were first seen in 2011 when Charlie Slater (Derek Martin) left Walford.

Other streets

Turpin Way includes the local garage, informally known as The Arches, the community centre, a playground and a boxing gym.[7] Other locations seen or mentioned in the series include Victoria Square, Walford Towers, Kingsley Road,[17] Spring Lane and the High Street. Storylines in 2017 mentioned the demolition of Walford Towers, as a means of introducing new characters to the series. Walford Common was introduced to the series for the "Who Killed Lucy Beale?" storyline in 2014. Clifton Hill Road was shown as the location for Walford Crematorium in the episode shown on 17 April 2017,[18] while New Street was shown as the address of the veterinary surgery in the episode shown on 24 April 2017.[19] Eastfields Crematorium on Fairford Lane is the location of Abi Branning's funeral in the episode shown on 16 February 2018.[20]

See also

References

  1. Smith 2005.
  2. 1 2 3 "How was the name Walford chosen?". BBC. Archived from the original on 5 April 2007.
  3. "London Postcodes". Flatshare Ltd. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  4. "ROYAL MAIL INTRODUCES NEW E20 POSTCODE FOR THE OLYMPIC PARK". London Legacy Development Corporation. 18 March 2011. Archived from the original on 6 November 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  5. "Underground EastEnders". Underground History. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
  6. Eastenders Website
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "Welcome to Albert Square". Inside Soap. 12–18 July 2014.
  8. "Interesting Places and Famous Faces". Hackney Borough Council. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  9. "What's the history of the Queen Vic?". BBC. Archived from the original on 20 December 2006.
  10. Kilkelly, Daniel. "EastEnders reveals dramatic September storylines". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 September 2014.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Kathy's Café: Back where it belongs". BBC Online. 6 December 2016. Archived from the original on 23 February 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2018.
  12. Executive Consultant: John Yorke; Director: Steve Finn; Writer: Rob Gittins (5 December 2017). "Episode dated 05/12/2017". EastEnders. BBC. BBC One.
  13. Executive Consultant: John Yorke; Director: Lance Kneeshaw; Writer: Carey Andrews (28 December 2017). "Episode dated 28/12/2017 (part 2/2)". EastEnders. BBC. BBC One.
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Club classics!". Inside Soap. 2018 (8): 52–53. 24 February – 2 March 2018.
  15. Leboff 2002, pp. 92.
  16. "Get your anoraks on... trains are coming!". BBC Online. 3 February 2010. Retrieved 4 February 2010.
  17. "Lucy Beale Case File – Evidence: Funeral". EastEnders. BBC Online. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  18. Executive Producer: Sean O'Connor; Director: Lance Kneeshaw; Writer: Daran Little (17 April 2017). "Episode dated 17/04/2017". EastEnders. BBC. BBC One.
  19. Executive Producer: Sean O'Connor; Director: John Greening; Writer: Natalie Mitchell (24 April 2017). "Episode dated 24/04/2017". EastEnders. BBC. BBC One.
  20. Executive Consultant: John Yorke; Director: Dominic Keavey; Writer: Carey Andrews (16 February 2018). "Episode dated 16/02/2018". EastEnders. BBC. BBC One.

Bibliography

  • Smith, Rupert (2005). EastEnders: 20 Years in Albert Square. BBC Books, BBC Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-563-52165-5.
  • Leboff, David (2002). The Underground Stations of Leslie Green. Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-255-0.
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