The BBC has confirmed the Call the Midwife prequel series will replace the traditional festive special
Devotees of Call the Midwife won’t have to wait long for exciting new episodes.
The BBC drama’s fifteenth series recently concluded with the poignant passing of Sister Monica Joan, leaving audiences heartbroken.
Nevertheless, viewers can anticipate thrilling new instalments arriving on their screens before year’s end, as creator and writer Heidi Thomas has announced a prequel series set during the London Blitz in Poplar, East London.
Drawing on the memoirs of renowned nurse and midwife Jennifer Worth, Call the Midwife was orginally set in 1957, when the National Health Service was a relatively new institution, with recent episodes chronicling the early 1970s.
The forthcoming series will, however, turn back time to World War II and showcase younger incarnations of cherished characters Sisters Julienne, Monica Joan, and Evangelina, previously played by Jenny Agutter, Judy Parfitt, and Pam Ferris, reports the Mirror.
When will the Call the Midwife prequel broadcast?
Programme executives have now revealed there won’t be the customary festive offering from Nonatus House this year, as no Christmas special is planned, The Sun reports.
Heidi Thomas disclosed at a recent press gathering: “No, there won’t be a Christmas special this Christmas, not in the traditional mould. This is really just a very temporary pause in the usual pattern.”
Instead, the Call the Midwife prequel, titled Sisters In Arms, will take pride of place during the Christmas period. The three-part mini-series will supplant the traditional festive episodes, concentrating on the formative years of Nonnatus House.
Heidi described the new series as being about “strong women above all else”, as they’re forced to navigate a world beyond their control, while the men are sent off to war or overseas, reports Radio Times.
She also revealed that while she has “never run out of stories for our midwives”, the prequel emerged after she found herself “yearning to delve into the deeper past” than the years 1957 to 1971, which the show has chronicled, the BBC teases.
“The Blitz years in the East End were extraordinary – filled with loss, togetherness, courage and joy,” she added.
Not only will there be a prequel broadcast later this year, but the beloved show will also transition to the big screen, set in 1972 abroad. However, a release date for the film has not yet been announced.
Call the Midwife is available to stream on BBC iPlayer







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