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Economic Development

Film and TV brings £17m boost to Bristol pre-Covid with shows including The Spanish Princess and Doctor Who

There were 699 jobs generated as a result of filming in the city

The Spanish Princess 2020(Image: Jason Bell/Starz)

Film and television production boosted inward investment in Bristol by £17million last year, new figures from the Bristol Film Office show.

According to the annual stats, which are up £1million on the year previously, there were 957 filming days across the city in the financial year ending March 2020.

Some 699 jobs were also estimated to have been generated by productions and businesses operating at The Bottle Yard Studios, which appointed a new senior film manager in September.

The data is calculated using national average production spend figures compiled by Creative England, with contribution from all national Film Offices' data.

Season two of period drama The Spanish Princess , which began on October 11 on STARZ and the STARZPLAY app, and Lena Dunham’s banking drama Industry , which begins on BBC One and HBO next month, were just two of 252 productions issued with permits to film in the city in the past financial year.

Bristol also played host to a number of other high-profile TV dramas last year, including His Dark Materials, which will launch on BBC One and HBO in November.

A Discovery of Witches (Sky One) also returned to film scenes in Berkeley Square for season two, which is due to air in January 2021.

Kaya Scodelario (as Hermia Easterbrook) and Rufus Sewell (as Mark Easterbrook) on the set of The Pale Horse (BBC One)(Image: Jonny Birch/Mammoth Screen)

Upcoming Netflix sci-fi series The One filmed at numerous locations around the city, and the Doctor Who festive extended special, Revolution of the Daleks , which is set to air over the Christmas period, was filmed partly on Bristol’s Clifton Suspension Bridge.