Great British Railway Journeys: Elgin to Loch Ness


07:10 am - 07:35 am, Sunday, March 29 on U&Yesterday (27)

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About this Broadcast

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Elgin to Loch Ness
Season 11, Episode 5

Michael Portillo is at Elgin's port, the coastal town of Lossiemouth, where the Labour Party's first prime minister James Ramsay MacDonald was born. Nearby, Michael finds a remote boarding school established in the 1930s and famous today both for its unusual ideas and its royal former pupils. His penultimate stop is Inverness, where he uncovers the work of female photographer MEM Donaldson, who documented a Highland way of life that was rapidly disappearing. Michael's journey ends at Loch Ness, where he joins a Deep Scan research team scouring the deep for signs of the elusive monster


HD subtitles 16x9
Education/Science/Factual Topics General Leisure Hobbies Tourism/Travel

Cast & Crew

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Michael Portillo (Presenter)
Alison Kreps (Series editor)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Michael Portillo (Presenter)
Born: May 26, 1953 in Bushey, Hertfordshire
Best Known For: Losing his parliamentary seat in 1997.
Early-life: Michael Denzil Xavier Portillo was born in north London on May 26, 1953. He is the son of Luis (an exiled Spanish republican) and Scotland-born teacher Cora. As a child he wanted to become an actor, and appeared in a TV advert for Ribena. After attending Harrow County School for Boys, Michael went on to graduate from Cambridge with a first class degree in history and worked at a shipping company for a year. In 1976, he moved to the Conservative Research Department, where he spent three years. He worked for various government ministers until 1983.
Career: Portillo entered the House of Commons in 1984 as the MP for Enfield Southgate following the murder of the previous incumbent, Sir Anthony Berry, in the IRA bombing of Brighton's Grand Hotel. He was a minister for 11 years and held three positions in the Cabinet, including Secretary of State for Defence. In 1997, he was one of many Tory MPs who lost their seats at the general election that saw Labour sweep to power. He returned to the Commons between 2000 and 2005, becoming Shadow Chancellor. However, his decision to leave politics led to a new career as a political pundit and a TV presenter, fronting documentaries on subjects as diverse as the death penalty, the railways and composer Wagner.
Quote: On losing his Enfield seat in 1997: 'Well it was certainly a great opportunity to return to normal life.'
Trivia: Portillo has been married to Carolyn Eadie since 1982.
Anthony Holland (Director)
Alison Kreps (Series editor)