What the Dickens is going on here? - Events & Attractions - Going Out - Evening Standard
       

What the Dickens is going on here?

It is dark, dirty and smelly, full of thieves, ghosts, murderers and really rather unpleasant schoolmasters. But then that's Charles Dickens for you.

This month a visitor attraction devoted to the life and works of the author will open at a £62million complex in what was once the Royal Naval Dockyard in Chatham, Kent.

Dickens World is close to where he was brought up - his father worked at the dockyard. But its heart is a painstakingly recreated Victorian London, from the cramped streets to Newgate Prison to the city waterways of Oliver Twist.

Attractions include a boat ride the operators claim is the longest of its kind in Europe, and a haunted house featuring the various Christmas ghosts as well as Ebenezer Scrooge.

Escaped convict Magwitch is there with his chilling warning, "You ain't seen me!" And there is a Fagin's den, though it is now a children's soft play area.

No effort has been spared to make the experience as 'orrible as Dickensian London. When the project was launched by Kevin Christie, the International Dickens Fellowship was called in to ensure authenticity. The result looks good.

Newgate Prison's walls are cracked and peeling, the river is a dirty brown - and the smells are as rank as anything the writer had to endure. As Dickens World manager Ross Hutchins said: "The smell here is horribly pungent."

The rickety buildings and walkways of Fagin's Creek convince. It is easy to imagine the winch over the boat ride being the one Bill Sikes used as he tried to escape the police in Oliver Twist. The schoolroom, with its wooden desks, inkwells and homilies to "Respect Thy Elders", could easily pass for Dotheboys Hall in Nicholas Nickleby - except the desks then did not have interactive screens.

There is also a 20-minute Victorian musical with animatronic performers.

Mr Christie said purists would have no cause to complain: "Dickens was not a purist, he was a populist. He wrote stories serialised for newspapers. If he were alive he would be writing for TV. I think he would have loved this."

The project is also key to the regeneration of one of the most depressed parts of the South-East. When the dockyards closed in 1984, more than 7,000 jobs were lost. Since then millions of pounds have been poured into the area.

Comments

Don't Miss
Gala night for the Queen of arts - stars turn out in their hundreds to pay tribute

Happy & glorious

Stars turn out in their hundreds to pay tribute to Queen
Prints charming: patterned trousers for summer

Prints charming

Patterned trousers for summer
Promethipedia: the lowdown on Ridley Scott's new blockbuster Prometheus

Promethipedia

The lowdown on Ridley Scott's new blockbuster Prometheus
The Middletan: Kate Middleton has the most requested tan in London

The Middletan

Kate Middleton has the most requested tan in London
Amy Childs bares all like Britney

Dare to bare

Amy Childs vajazzles like Britney
Thais go Gaga: singer’s ‘fake rolex’ tweet sparks new tour row... but fans still mob her at airport

Thais go Gaga

Singer mobbed at airport
Trip the bright fantastic - in vertiginous neon

Fashion

Trip the bright fantastic - in vertiginous neon
Chelsea Champions League celebrations - in pictures

Victory parade

Chelsea Champions League celebrations
High-flying heroes

High flying heroes

David Oyelowo reveals all about new film Red Tails
The Twitter Diaries: Think Bridget Jones tries social networking

The Twitter Diaries

Think Bridget Jones tries social networking