It's 'the big house with the massive hedge' which plays a starring role in hit comedy Amandaland.
Amandalands £4.25M Georgian Dream Home Revealed!
It's 'the big house with the massive hedge' which plays a starring role in BBC hit comedy Amandaland.In the highly-anticipated second series of the Motherland s...
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In the highly-anticipated second series of the Motherland spin-off, protagonist Amanda Hughes, played by Lucy Punch, sets her sights on the lavish property which she believes will finally give her 'the Georgian proportions' she deserves.
The recently divorced former boutique owner and overbearing mother aggressively targets 'the old cat lady' who lives there - even drawing up plans to rip out the kitchen she hates and introduce 'some Scandi accents' into the house's interior which has been turned into 'a monstrosity'.
In the series, the 'big house' is owned by Elspeth, played by , who is looking to sell up as 'the stairs aren't getting any easier' and she wants to move nearer to her son.
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The Daily Mail can reveal that rather than being in the run-down neighbourhood of South Harlesden - which Amanda refers to as SoHa - the property is one of the grandest homes in the trendy south-east London district of Camberwell.
Just two years ago the four storey Victorian house - which has 12 bedrooms and six bathrooms and was built in 1871 - was put on the market for a whopping £4.25million.
It's 'the big house with the massive hedge' which plays a starring role in BBC hit comedy Amandaland, the property that Amanda - played by Lucy Punch - sets her heart on buying
In the hit BBC comedy Amanda believes the sprawling home - owned by Elspeth, played by Pam Ferris, who is looking to sell - will finally give her 'the Georgian proportions' she deserves
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The property - whose grand spiral staircase featured prominently in the TV show which also stars Joanna Lumley - comes with an outdoor heated swimming pool set in a secluded garden and sits on the corner of an affluent street with a neat park on the opposite side.
The detached home is located within the Minet Conservation Area, a distinct architectural neighbourhood built by a French Huguenot-descended family in the 1800s.
It is owned by actor William Chubb, 71, who bought the house with his late wife, journalist Cassandra Jardine, in 1998.
The couple raised their five children there and before the house went on the market, their daughter Christabel outlined the 'heartbreak' of selling their wisteria-lined 'happy family home'.
She told how she feared that giving up the house she grew up in would feel like losing her mother all over again. Cassandra tragically died of cancer aged just 57 in 2012.
The property is so big it has a separate three-bedroomed annex converted from an old horse and coach house which the family rented out.
A string of lodgers, a number who went on to become family friends, also rented rooms in the property.
After the children grew up and moved out, the property became too big for William, whose television credits include Vampire Academy, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and BBC's House of Cards.
Amanda is introduced to the house by Fi who is popping round to look after elderly Elspeth's cats. Spotting an opportunity to get the house on the cheap, Amanda offers to look after the cats herself in an attempt to befriend the elderly owner and persuade her to sell to her
The only room in the house Amanda takes a real dislike to is the kitchen - and takes a builder friend round to give her a quote - and says she'll rip it out when she buys it
Amandaland is famously set in the run down neighbourhood of South Harlesden - which she refers to as 'SoHa.' But this property is actually in the trendy London district of Camberwell
It is actually owned by actor William Chubb, 71, who bought the house with his late wife, journalist Cassandra Jardine, in 1998. The couple raised their five children at the property
After the children grew up and moved out, the property became too big for William, whose television credits include Vampire Academy, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and BBC's House of Cards
He and the family took the difficult decision to put it on the market a few years ago for £4.25million. Their daughter Christabel explained that her father had grown tired of lodgers and with the cost of fuel going up, he felt it was time for the family to say goodbye to it
Christabel wrote in August 2023: 'My dad has grown tired of lodgers, and with the growing cost of keeping it going, he eventually decided to sell it.
'We had private, tearful conversations with each other, all of us feeling the same way: losing the house would feel like losing mum all over again. The two were inextricably linked.
'I know this scenario is not exclusive to us: the cost of energy has increased by a million per cent in the past two years, mortgage rates are astronomical and building costs are rocketing.
'Many homeowners have decided to downsize, but this cocktail of financial turmoil hardly makes for a 'good climate' in which to sell a house.'
But she said the family had come to terms with saying goodbye to their home adding: 'It's a rite of passage that all adults must eventually go through: saying goodbye to things that matter most to you.
'It is time for us to employ some of mum's determined optimism: we did it once, we can do it again.
'I know that the wisteria will continue to bloom long after we're gone, and I know that dad will find somewhere else he loves, if not quite as much, then almost.'
In the end the property was taken off the market and it is believed to be rented out to television companies with location fees up to £15,000-a-day for large period properties, Amandaland may have provided the family with a welcome financial lifeline.
When it went up for sale, estate agents described the property as a 'remarkable detached Victorian house' which was being 'offered to the market for the first time in a generation'.
It was described as being 'arguably one of the most important houses to come to the market in Camberwell for many years'.
The agents wrote in a glossy brochure: 'Once you step into the entrance hall the grand staircase and period detailing are immediately evident.
'The ground floor is the real hub of the house, being of grand proportions, filled with space and light courtesy of superb ceiling height and large windows.
Explaining their decision to sell the house, their daughter Christabel wrote in August 2023: 'We had private, tearful conversations with each other, all of us feeling the same way: losing the house would feel like losing mum all over again. The two were inextricably linked'
Summing the house up, they described it as 'a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to acquire this remarkable property, in an area of London that has always been home to those in the media and creative arts world'
'However, it is at once homely, relaxing and well lived in, with the beautiful kitchen providing dreamy views towards the park.'
The living room, at the rear of the house, has French doors leading out onto a huge terrace.
Describing the scene the agents wrote: 'Suddenly you are transported to another world, as the huge garden swings into view.'
There's also a front room that 'would make an excellent games room or cinema room'.
The house's lower ground floor consists of 'two very large double bedrooms and a single room plus two bathrooms'.
It also has its own side access, which 'could be of interest to those looking for a teenager's hangout or staff flat within the main house'.
The first floor features the principal bedroom, complete with en-suite bathroom, along with two further bedrooms and study while the top floor has three additional double bedrooms and a family bathroom.
They said of the annex building: 'Currently rented out, The Coach House could continue as a useful rental investment property, or could offer a number of potential uses to those who are perhaps looking for a creative home studio space, be it an artist, gallery owner or collector.
'It would make a fantastic home recording studio, or house a small classic car collection.'
Summing the house up, they described it as 'a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to acquire this remarkable property, in an area of London that has always been home to those in the media and creative arts world and is now attracting a wide variety of people for its quiet yet buzzy atmosphere and independent spirit'.
In her account published in the Daily Telegraph, Christabel told how the family moved there when they were 'desperately in need of more space' when her mother was pregnant with her fifth child.
She told how, as the children grew up, it had been 'the setting for countless dinner parties, birthday celebrations and Christmases'.
She wrote: 'The sounds of chatter, laughter and clinking glasses echoing off the high ceiling were so appealing that I'd sit on the staircase and listen in on the grownups long after I'd been sent to bed.'
Meanwhile, on Saturdays, the garden would be filled with 'extended family, neighbours, friends, lodgers and colleagues enjoying a swim, drink, chat and stolen moment together, happily forgetting that we are in the south of London, not the south of France'.
Her mother had been fulfilling her dream of 'forming her own Von Trapp clan' when she fell ill with lung cancer in 2010, Christabel wrote.
In the end the property was taken off the market and it is believed to be rented out to television companies with location fees up to £15,000-a-day for large period properties, Amandaland may have provided the family with a welcome financial lifeline
The property is so big it has a separate three-bedroomed annex converted from an old horse and coach house which the family rented out
Cassandra continued to work despite being under the care of nurses and night nurses while medical equipment turned her parents' room into 'a makeshift hospital room' while a stairlift was installed 'to ferry Mum (and lazy teenagers) up and down the stairs'.
Christabel wrote: 'Towards the end of her life, she reassured us that her last two years had in fact been two of her happiest: she was able to spend time at home, surrounded by her family and legions of friends.'
Eventually, she said, her mother was taken to Trinity Hospice, in Clapham, where she died in her sleep 14 hours later in May 2012.
Following her death, William told how Cassandra's courage had been an inspiration to both him and his children.
He outlined how the house was very much 'the domain' of Cassandra - who had often written about her family life and 'her large rambling home'.
It was only during the last six months of her life when she was confined to a wheelchair that she retreated from its day-to-day running.
In 2012 he said: 'It's true, it was very much her set-up. I was proud to call myself a supporting player in this particular show.
He added: 'Over the two years of her illness she withdrew from it little by little, for obvious reasons. And we grew to know our roles.
'If you think of it as a stage production, the lead player gracefully made her final exit, but we are able to get on with the play without her.'
William was away from the property this week but one resident there told the Daily Mail: 'I haven't seen the show but everyone's been talking about it and how the house features in it.
'It was on the market a couple of years back but in the end they didn't have to sell it and I think filming Amandaland here might have helped.'
Locals told how filming took place 'over a few days' at the end of last year.
The resident said: 'It was filmed just before Christmas.
'I don't think the people who made it have said whether the house will feature in the next series or not. I don't know any more about it.'
Neighbours told the Daily Mail this week that they are used to seeing film crews come and go now that the property is routinely rented out as a location property to provide an extra income for the owners
One neighbour said: 'There was a big crew here but everybody was given notice about it and they weren't any trouble.
'There was quite a lot of them over the road in the park where I think they were shooting some scenes.
'Some of them had high visibility jackets and they set up some equipment there.
'There are some big period homes in this street and the surrounding area so you do see filming going on from time to time - everyone's used to it.'
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