PEAKY Blinders fans are in for a treat when the Black Country Living Museum hosts an evening dedicated to the hit BBC drama later this year.

The show has filmed parts of all three seasons at the museum and on September 10, visitors will be plunged into the dark underworld of the 1930s Brummie gang.

Live music, dancing and gin cocktails – the museum will be pulling out all the stops to recreate the heady glitz and roaring nightlife that characterised the interwar period.

The museum even has its own version of the Garrison pub in its early 20th century Bottle and Glass Inn, where bottles of Sadler’s Peaky Blinders beer will be at the ready.

Peaky-style street theatre will bring the gritty period of history to life, with the smoky back streets and authentic slum housing at the museum providing the backdrop.

Visitors will also be free to explore over 50 period shops and houses and their costumed inhabitants throughout the evening to get a sense of what life was like for the notorious gang.

Peaky Blinders buffs will instantly recognise where key scenes have been filmed.

The set for Charlie Strong’s yard will be open for fans to explore as well as the entire canal arm, where illegal goods are moved along the historic Birmingham Canal Network in the series.

Those attending the one off event are encouraged to dust of their suits and dress the part. Herringbone flat caps and authentic 30s shirts will be on sale at the museum, as well as an onsite 1930s-style barber by appointment, for those who want to perfect their Peaky look.

Tickets cost £12 and can be booked by visiting www.bclm.com/peakyblinders.