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Taking the Kids: Celebrating Harry Potter in Britain on his 20th anniversary

By Eileen Ogintz, Tribune Content Agency on

Harry, has it really been 20 years? Yes, it's been that long since we met you and Hermione Granger, Ron Weasley and your professors at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in J.K. Rowling's book "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone." Twenty years since anxious readers waited in line at midnight for your next adventure and dressed as you for Halloween.

That first book was released on June 29, 1997 and was followed by six others, an eight-part film series, a play, "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child," also published as a script, and two Wizarding Worlds at Universal Studios in Orlando and Hollywood. The series is considered the bestselling in history.

So it's no surprise that Britain is planning a lot of celebrations in Harry's name. The good news for all of the fans on this side of the pond: It's an excellent time to visit London and beyond, post-Brexit (Britain's vote to leave the European Union), the dollar is the strongest it's been against the British pound in many years (one U.S. dollar equals about 1.25 British pounds, down from 1.6 a year ago), which means your money will go farther.

An American family of four could save at least $140 a day as a result of the weakened pound for hotels, tickets to a major attraction and even a West End Show, according to calculations from VisitLondon.com.

At the same time, you might be able to score a discount fare. For example, British Air has some round-trip, seven-day fares to London starting at $473 from New York and just over $600 from Los Angeles. (Visit www.BritishAirways.com and click on "find our cheapest fares.")

Discount carrier Norwegian Air will be flying from three smaller U.S. airports (Stewart International, about 65 miles north of Manhattan, Bradley International in Connecticut and T.F. Green Airport in Rhode Island. Some one-way fares are as low as $169.

 

Guided tours in London will take you around familiar Harry Potter film locations, either by foot, boat or bus. Brit Movie Tour, London Walks and Discovery Walks of London, but you can also design your own Harry Potter tour, letting the kids lead the way, magic wands in hand.

Stay at the Georgian House in Pimlico for a Wizarding Chamber hotel experience. The room is concealed behind a bookcase door in the 19th-century hotel and has cauldrons in the fireplace and stained glass windows.

First on a Potter fan's list must sure be the chance to go behind the scenes of the Harry Potter films outside London at the Warner Bros. Studio Tour London – The Making of Harry Potter. I met families from around the world, who came to London specifically for this tour!

Opening in time for Easter, a new permanent expansion at the Warner Bros. Studio Tour was created by members of the design and construction crew who worked on the original Harry Potter film sets. Step over the twisting roots of 19 giant trees, come face-to-face with Aragog the Acromantula and take control of the weather in the mysterious forest. Another "Wizarding Wardrobes" exhibit will be open this summer. (Some hotels, like The Grove, have packages that include the Warner Brothers Studio Tour.)

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