I love everything about hospitals... I thought that would be my life
Emma Willis has forever pleaded with TV bosses to do a documentary about midwives – now she’s got her chance. She tells MICHAEL BONIFACE how the delivery room is a markedly different challenge to the diary room
IF TV hadn’t come calling, presenter Emma Willis knows exactly where she would have ended up – in hospital.
The host of The Voice and Big Brother had planned to follow in the footsteps of her mum, Cathy, who was a nurse for 40 years.
Now she gets the chance to do just that in her new six-part documentary series, Emma Willis: Delivering Babies.
“It’s probably random to people who don’t know me,” says Emma, 42. “But anybody that does know me knows just how long I have wanted and waited to do this.”
A mother to three children with Busted’s Matt Willis, the proud Brummie has more than a just a maternal streak.
“I love everything to do with hospitals and always thought that would be my life,” Emma begins, proudly.
“I grew up around the NHS with both of my parents working in a hospital. I worked in a care home when I was 14 and all my work experience at school was in a hospital. So that was the plan for me.
“But then my life took a very, very different turn – one that I never expected.”
This “turn” saw Emma pick up modelling at 17, going on to work for some of the biggest names in the business including Marie Claire, Vogue and Chanel. She’s now the face of Next.
Her breakthrough in broadcasting meanwhile came on MTV in 2002, before she established herself as a familiar face on TV and voice on radio, presenting for the likes of BBC, ITV, Channel 5 and Heart FM.
But despite all this success, moving from one interview with David Beckham to the next with Kylie
Minogue, Emma has always felt there was a crucial part missing in her career.
With a distinct sense of purpose, she says: “I’ve always wanted to do a programme around hospitals because that’s my real passion. But over the years no one’s ever wanted to do it.
“Then luckily I met the amazing production team at Firecracker and this documentary is what they came back with.
“It’s honestly been the most amazing experience and I could literally kiss them every day for the rest of my life!”
It was by no means an easy ride, though. The cameras followed Emma as she worked 12-hour shifts as a maternity care assistant at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Essex, to find out what it takes to be on the front line of midwifery.
She says: “To do that show justice, we had to do it properly, which meant doing the same hours as all other maternity care assistants in the hospital.
“So I completely cleared my diary for those 12 weeks and solely dedicated my time to the show.”
Despite this level of sheer commitment, Emma was acutely aware of her detractors.
“I was nervous because I felt like a huge impostor,” she recalls. “I was
scared of being judged – that was my biggest fear.
“I remember walking into the unit on my first day and in the back of my head, going, ‘They think I’m just about to rock up for a couple of hours and go home. They think I’m playing.’
“But I couldn’t have been more wrong. They were all so wonderful and welcoming – they supported me the whole way.”
Emma’s immersion into a completely new world reflects not just her sense of duty to her own job, but also her desire to raise awareness for the profession –
and the unique rigours of the role.
“It’s an incredibly timeconsuming job. They put in so many hours and so much hard graft – mentally and physically.
“They do such an amazing job supporting pregnant women and I was just there to help in any way I could, even if it was just getting the mum a cup of tea. Or if they were emotional, to let them cry.
“I’m so emotional though, I ended up crying with them – I cried at every birth!”
Did the sight of so many babies make Emma want more of her own, then?
“I was really broody at the beginning. It’s such an emotional, overwhelming and beautiful experience, and you think, ‘Oh my God, I remember that... I want to do it again!’
“Fast forward to a day later: your nipples are cracked and falling off,
you haven’t slept, your milk hasn’t come in, and the baby’s crying all the time.
“Then you’re like, ‘You know what, I’ve done it three times – let’s not push my luck!”’
OK, so no more babies. But the crazy pace of Emma’s life shows no signs of slowing just yet.
“The documentary was such a crazy, emotional but unbelievable experience.
“Out of nowhere, I’ve then fast forwarded a couple of weeks and I’m already hosting Big Brother’s final series (which she doesn’t rule herself out of presenting again, should it be picked up by another channel).
“So now I’m there hosting Big Brother and I’m suddenly thinking, ‘What?... Well, this is different!’
“So it’s an odd life, but it’s a good one.” ■