Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Benjamin Lee

Emma Thompson films Great British Bake Off spoof to protest fracking

‘I’ve been aware of this issue for a while with my work with Greenpeace’ ... Emma Thompson during a peaceful protest this week.
‘I’ve been aware of this issue for a while with my work with Greenpeace’ ... Emma Thompson during a peaceful protest this week. Photograph: John Cobb/Greenpeace/PA

Emma Thompson has broken a court injunction – and come uncomfortably close to a manure-spreading tractor – to film a Great British Bake Off spoof on land leased for fracking.

The Oscar-winner, along with her sister Sophie, made The Frack Free Bake Off as a satirical way of protesting against any drilling activity on a Lancashire site used by oil and gas exploration company Cuadrilla. Protesters have been banned from the area after a 2014 injunction.

“I’ve been aware of this issue for a while with my work with Greenpeace, and it came to a head for me when David Cameron went to the Paris climate conference and signed on to the protocol and then on the sly at Christmas, when nobody was looking, gave the nod to 200 fracking sites in Britain,” the actor said. “It proved to me our Government is saying one thing and doing the opposite.”

Emma Thompson met by police as she starts her protest – Greenpeace video

The sisters baked energy-themed cakes in a marquee created by Greenpeace and have released a series of videos detailing their work. A full episode of the show they have created will be released later today, 28 April.

The farmer who leases the land, at Preston New Road on the Fylde, near Blackpool, drove a muck spreader past the makeshift studio – hitting many of the crew with liquid manure. Police arrived but made no arrests.

Phone video of a farmer spraying manure at protesters

The decision to lease the field to Cuadrilla has caused local upset and an application to drill has been rejected by Lancashire County Council, but the company has appealed the decision.

It follows Emma Thompson’s involvement in an attempt to urge the new director of the British Museum to drop BP as a sponsor. Along with other notable figures, including Mark Rylance and Margaret Atwood, an open letter was sent to Hartwig Fischer in the hope he would veto a new contract with the oil company.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.