The real stories, lives and dramas behind the smash hit BBC series Call the Midwife which premieres on PBS September 30, 2012.
The official companion to seasons one and two, The Life and Times of Call the Midwife, gives fans a deeper insight into the period, the stories and the characters, and how Call the Midwife, based on the bestselling memoirs by Jennifer Worth, was brought to the screen.
With never before seen photographs taken on set as well as unique sketches and exclusive interviews and anecdotes, this book truly takes you behind the scenes. Discover the hidden secrets of the nurses and nuns of Nonnatus House and delve deeper into the historical context of the series with chapters detailing birth, health, faith, fashion, beauty, street life and food. From the team who brought you The World of Downton Abbey, high production values and attention to detail will create the ultimate and beautifully packaged gift purchase this Christmas that no fan of the show could bare to be without.
Heidi Thomas is a playwright, television executive producer and screenwriter, whose credits include: the 2010 continuation of the popular series Upstairs Downstairs, and period piece Lilies (2007), alongside adaptions of Jennifer Worth's Call the Midwife, Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford, and a film version of Dodie Smith's I Capture the Castle.
Along with many others, one of my favorite shows on television is Call the Midwife. It has everything I love in storytelling: rich, memorable characters; an exquisitely realized setting; unsentimental religion; and meaningful plot arcs. Learning how Heidi Thomas and her team created the first two seasons of Call the Midwife, based on Jennifer Worth’s memoirs, was pure joy. The Life and Times of Call the Midwife spares no delightful detail about the creation and production of the show.
All the fun facts one expects to find in a book like this are here in spades. The incomparable casting of Miranda Hart was my favorite. The real Jennifer Worth saw Hart fall over on her sitcom Miranda and knew she would be perfect for Chummy. Hart loved the script and was eager to ply her trade in drama despite being known for comedy. The chapter “Homes” covers production design of the sets, ephemera, and the general stuff of on-screen lives, and was very informative to read, like the following chapter “Food.” I’m now wondering if the reputed blandness of English cuisine comes from the deprivation of the wars and the Depression, when various spices and foods were unavailable for normal consumption. When your grandparents had no access to a type of food, your parents didn’t grow up with it either, and would not know how to use it themselves. The USA had a very different, and much laxer, experience with war rationing. While England still produces much of its own food, the wars cut off their access to foodstuffs from Africa and other warmer climates, while the USA has such climates within its borders. The USA’s approach to rationing was more often “less” rather than “none at all.”
One of my dreams is to see a prequel series to Call the Midwife, perhaps based on the earlier life of Sister Monica Joan, that covers Poplar in the 1910s-1940s. It would likely be much grittier and more depressing than the early seasons of Call the Midwife, because there’s no NHS to provide assistance to the poorest of the poor, but the Order of St John the Divine (the real-life Order of St Raymond Nonnatus) still worked in Poplar at that time. Two world wars and the Great Depression are sadder time periods for England than the gradual economic uplift of the 1950s and 1960s. Yet, viewers (like us) can dream, thank you.
I highly recommend The Life and Times of Call the Midwife to anyone who wants a bridge between Worth’s excellent, though often grueling, memoirs and the show itself. Worth lightly fictionalized parts of her memoirs (such as describing a birth as if she was there, when it was really her coworker’s story), and Thomas shares about her relationship with Worth and the showrunning decisions they made together in the “Diaries” portions. A follow-up volume, Call the Midwife: A Labour of Love, will be published in February to commemorate the show’s 10-year run--and counting, as new installments will grace US screens in March, and the show’s future is secure for two more series after this. A Labour of Love is written by Stephen McGann, who portrays Dr. Turner, and is in real life the husband of Heidi Thomas, the showrunner. I look forward to learning about the decisions the team made in portraying the changing world of Poplar in the 1960s.
Amazing book that made me feel like I went back in time while reading it. Amazing to see how the tv show came together and about how peoples lives were back in the 50s. The NHS really was a life saver to millions and the nuns and midwives did such amazing things for their communitys! I love the show and I love the book!
I was initially wary of this book, but within a couple of pages it had me spell bound. You need to watch the series of Call the Midwife first (and possibly read the books on the series ) to appreciate what this book entails . It is a wonderful book well written,full of facts and history which so many of us can remember. The book details everything from the sets, characters make up and consultations with the late Jennifer, and also a meeting with the lady whom Trixie is based on. I do think the late Jennifer Worth would have liked it as it was such an insight linking herself and her books with the making of an authentic drama. It is a hard back cover and whilst mine was half price I would gladly have paid the full price for it . If you enjoyed the books and the series then this is a must. It is now a treasured book along with my copies of the 3 books in the series and my christmas present of a dvd set of the series. I and other family members will go over the book again and again, not a book to sit in the book case but one to be enjoyed and shared.
I just got into this series and am really enjoying it. It's a surprise though- I don't have kids and have never wanted them and this is a series about midwives. However, it's about so much more! I did a search because I think I want to read the Memoirs the series is based on and found this at my library. (I just finished season 2). What I liked about this book with the backgrounds on the characters- some of the characters are based on real people and others a mix of totally made up vs a composite of a person. It was refreshing to see a group of people who really care about what they are doing. I thought they made things as historically accurate as possible. I liked the background of the NHS (National Health Service). Overall, recommended for fans of the show.
I'm very late to the party, but I am currently watching my way through this great TV series, having never seen it before! This is a lovely companion book to the show.
Fun look at the behind the scenes and making of the series. I liked finding out the real order (St John of the Divine) and people (Sister Julienne = Jocelyn, Trixie = Antonia, Cynthia Miller = Cynthia Miller), but I'm a little sad Chummy either didn't really exist or existed at some other job. I've also heard Sr Monica Joan may not have really existed, either. I liked the look at hair and makeup and casting, plus getting a little more info on the characters, too, though I'm not sure how fandom jumped from Dr. Turner keeping a scarf his wife gave him weeks before she died to he was wearing it in the last scene of season 3!
Really interesting companion to season 1 of the series. Lots of intriguing tidbits like the fact that the producer and writer, Heidi Thomas, is married to Stephen McGann, who plays Dr. Turner in the series.
A lovely addition to the series, which I also loved. If you liked the tv series I can guarantee you'll like this too. Lots of interesting facts, and lots of great pictures.
Written by the series showrunner (and, I learned, wife to Stephen McGann, who plays Dr. Turner so amazingly), this is more than just a rundown of the episodes, some glossy pics and some character bios. Ms. Thomas described the long and grinding process of getting the show off the ground, her meetings with Jennifer Worth, and details like recreating 1950s London streets, the costuming, and all the background bits and pieces that are necessary to fully immerse the viewers in this world. She also tracked down the convent and nuns that Jennifer worked with and who inspired the stories. It was interesting to learn that one of the stories that Jennifer featured in her first memoir actually happened to another nurse! Lots of fascinating detail about the period and about recreating it on screen. There’s even some recipes. I found this great fun.
100% recommend this if you are a Call the Midwife viewer and are interested int he historical aspects of the show! Although this only covers seasons 1 and 2 (hoping there are more coming out), it's still a fascinating look behind the scenes. This book is filled with information about why the show's creators made the choices they did and how it all came together in the end. I also liked their highlighting each character and explaining bits of their personalities. Personally, I would have loved to see the characters highlighted a bit more and seen more comprehensive interviews with the characters playing the characters. I honestly think that'd be a bit more interesting to read about than set design. I also would have loved to see more pictures, because they ones they did provide were so fun!
This book is beautifully illustrated and all but to be honest , you’re better off watching the show instead. This book just recaps what we’ve already seen on the show. It might be worth reading if you’ve just started the series but if you have been watching the show for 9 seasons now, reading this in season 9 is kind of pointless. It would be better if there was a similar book for the later seasons. However, this was written in 2013 and at the time no one was expecting CTM to last until 2022. The only young midwife who is still on the show from season 1 until now is Trixie. All the other young midwives left. Also, the fashion section is now out of date since we are now in 1965 and season 1-2 was in 1957-1958.
I loved getting to know more about the behind the scenes stuff that went into making Call the Midwife a great series! I loved finding out that Jennifer (the author of the books/memoirs) wanted to give the roles to up and coming actors, to give them an opportunity that they might not other wise have. I love all the little details that go into making things authentically 50's East End London. This was a great read with all the fun of illustrations and photos! I also liked having Heidi's notes on the process of accepting the challenge, meeting Jennifer, finding a way to make the Jenny of the book come to life on the screen, and the waiting and wondering.
A great companion to seasons 1 and 2 of the tv series. It is filled with great additional information of life during the time as well as lovely diary entries chronicalling the timeline of call the midwife from concept through to airing of the very first episode.
I do wish they had continued with this for later seasons - of which there have been 9 so far as well as many additional midwives and nuns.
I liked catching up on all the background details of my favorite show. Just enough about each person and the history behind the story line and the making of the series. Lots of great pictures to make it fun.
Blown away with what Heidi Thomas has done with Call the Midwife! Phenomenal story and book. Thank you everyone from Call the Midwife and all those Midwives and nurses thank you! Read this book!
Very interesting to read Heidi's ideas and view on, the books written by Jennifer worth and the talks they had with each other to do with the series, we have all come to love this books talks about seasons 1 and 2. Lovely read.
I am soooooo late to this wonderful show. I am currently on Season 12 or as the Brits would say Series 12, and I am missing the ladies from season 1 and 2. I wish this book went even more in-depth about the historical context of the show. I have to read Jennifer’s memoirs now.
love the call the midwife books and tv show … amazing to learn about what 50s health care was like progress that's been made and how it came together on screen.