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London Underground in popular culture

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The London Underground has long provided inspiration in various areas of popular culture.

Contents

[edit] Film and television

Filming is now managed all over the system but most commonly takes place at stations like Aldwych (a disused tube station), formerly on the Piccadilly Line, or the non-operational Jubilee line complex in Charing Cross. The Waterloo and City Line has occasionally been used for filming as it is closed on Sundays.

The LU Film Office at "www.tfl.gov.uk/filming" handles over 100 requests a month which proves that this iconic brand is now more important than ever to film makers producing a film in the Capital.

Although not "filmed" as such on the Underground, there have been two animated children's television series set on and around it. The first was Tube Mice, a 1988 series concerning the adventures of a group of mice living on the Underground. The second was the 2006 series Underground Ernie, set on a fantasy version of the network and featuring a friendly Underground supervisor and his talking trains. There was also a 2004 animated short, also called Tube Mice, about mice who keep the Underground in order.

Also, the Tube has been used for many other major films including Bridget Jones Diary I & II , Harry Potter and The Philosophers Stone, Code 46, Agent Cody Banks II, Love Actually, to name just a few, as well as BBC dramas such as Spooks and Hustle.

[edit] Art

The Great Bear by Simon Patterson in 1992 was a modified Tube Map. "Adapting the official map of the London Underground, Patterson has replaced the names of stations with philosophers, actors, politicians and other celebrated figures. The title The Great Bear refers to the constellation Ursa Major, a punning reference to Pattersons own arrangement of stars. Patterson playfully subverts our belief that maps and diagrams provide a reliable source of information. I like disrupting something people take as read, he comments." (from the entry by the Tate Gallery)

[edit] Music

  • Amateur Transplants has written and performed a song, also called "London Underground" (see London Underground Song lyrics), which deals with many of the gripes commuters encounter while taking the Tube. This has also been incorporated into a flash animation.[1]
  • Paul Weller of the band The Jam wrote the song "Down in the Tube Station at Midnight".
  • Cry, the second single from Alex Parks, features scenes from Charing Cross in its video.
  • In the song "Who Are You" After an encounter Pete Townshend had with the Sex Pistols, who saw him in a bar in Soho and greeted him, but he was very drunk and couldn't tell who they were. Townshend awoke outside the bar and was caught drunk by a policeman, but the cop was a fan and let him go. He then took the "Tube" back out of town

[edit] Literature

[edit] Other

[edit] External links

[edit] See also

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