The cult TV series is celebrating its 50th birthday. Deborah Maby returns to its setting, the fantasy village of Portmeirion, where she grew up.
Not long ago, I spent a weekend clearing out my bedroom at my late parents’ house in North Wales. My father had died in 2000, my mother in 2013. And now my sister and I were finally selling our share of the house to my brother.
The house is on the Portmeirion estuary, about ten minutes’ walk from the village itself, and about half-way between the towns of Penrhyndeudraeth and Porthmadog. My parents bought it in 1949, for £2,000, from the creator of Portmeirion, Clough Williams-Ellis himself – along with unlimited entry to the village for ourselves and all our visiting friends for as long as we lived there. So Portmeirion is embedded in my childhood, teenage and adult memories – and even those of my own children.
Almost whenever I mention Portmeirion, people respond with ‘Ah yes, The Prisoner!’; but, oddly, I don’t remember it having much bearing on our lives. I only realised belatedly what a cult phenomenon the series, created by and starring the late Patrick McGoohan, was – a cult that’s reaching a peak this month, which marks the 50th anniversary of the screening of the first episode. Surviving cast and crew are returning to Portmeirion on the anniversary, 29th September, along with McGoohan’s daughter, Catherine. The premiere of In My Mind – a feature-length documentary on The Prisoner – will be screened in the village. And a new DVD box set, featuring all 17 episodes, is being released.
This story is from the September 2017 edition of The Oldie Magazine.
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This story is from the September 2017 edition of The Oldie Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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