The Chronicle

STILL IN RUDE HEALTH

THE NINTH SERIES OF DOC MARTIN IS UPON US. STARS MARTIN CLUNES AND CAROLINE CATZ DISCUSS THE ENDURING APPEAL OF THE MUCH-LOVED DRAMA WITH GEORGIA HUMPHREYS

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SEAGULLS are squawking above Port Isaac harbour. Signs for homemade Cornish pasties catch your eye. Hordes of eager fans line the narrow streets winding down towards the sea.

There’s only one show this can be the set for – and that’s Doc Martin.

Stars Martin Clunes and Caroline Catz are on a break from filming, sitting in the bottom bar of the Golden Lion pub (better known to viewers as the Crab and Lobster).

Discussing the popularity of the ITV comedy drama – now in its ninth series – they reveal the elaborate gifts they receive from fans of the show.

“I’ve had quite a lot of knitwear – socks and gloves for all the family – which is very nice,” says 57-year-old Martin, also famous for Men Behaving Badly, Warren and Manhunt.

“Lego – there has been some lovely Lego figures,” Manchester­born Caroline, 49, chimes in.

Then there’s the poetry, the songs and the paintings.

“Lots of paintings!” the DCI Banks star enthuses. “It gets quite interestin­g, the fan artwork is brilliant.”

For anyone not in the know, the series centres around Martin’s character, grumpy GP Martin Ellingham, his wife Louisa (played by Caroline) and their lives in the sleepy, beautiful hamlet of Portwenn (Port Isaac in real life) in Cornwall.

The job is a family affair for Martin, as his wife Philippa produces

the show.

“It’s an immense pressure getting eight scripts of the quality that we like together, that serve everybody’s story arcs – all of our regular characters,” Wimbledon-born Martin confides.

“But it is worth it. I think once again, down to my wife and Mark (Crowdy, executive producer) and the various writers and everyone, they’ve really got it right. They’re really good scripts and all of the cast are happy with their bits.”

Storylines this series include the Doc coming up against the General Medical Council (GMC).

They want to take his badge away, following complaints about his irascible approach to patients – and there’s also his phobia of blood.

“It is a very serious threat and he is very annoyed by everything they (the GMC) throw at him because as far as he’s concerned, he’s fit to practise, and a little bit of vomiting here and there shouldn’t necessaril­y get in the way of that,” explains the father of one (daughter Emily was born in 1998).

The short-fused medic is less than impressed when Dr Rebecca Hedden (played by Hermione Gulliford) arrives to observe his surgery.

Back at home, we can expect to see the Doc and Louisa in a “very healthy” place, with lots of lovely scenes with them and their young son, James Henry.

“We’ve explored the ‘not getting on thing’ quite elaboratel­y, haven’t we?” Martin reflects, when asked how their relationsh­ip is now.

Plus, he points out, the couple have got their “own unconnecte­d agendas”; Louisa is pursuing a career in child counsellin­g, having left her job as headmistre­ss at the local school.

“I thought I was going to really miss the school,” conveys a smiley

I’ve had quite a lot of knitwear – socks and gloves for all the family – which is very nice

Martin Clunes on the gifts he’s received from fans

Caroline. “But I’ve been in the playground loads, because the nursery has now moved to the school. So, Louisa drops James off and finds out what’s going on behind the scenes.

“There’s a really fun episode with a new headmistre­ss, which has been really great. Louisa gets a bit protective and suspicious about what’s going on, and then realises that the headmistre­ss might have a very different approach.

“And then her curiosity gets the better of her, because she has sort of been shut out. I won’t ruin it but there’s an interventi­on that she does...”

“It’s a very, very embarrassi­ng episode for Louisa,” she adds with a laugh. “She lets herself down a little bit!”

Meanwhile, the Doc is as irritable as ever, with the main causes, Martin quips, being “patients and having to live with a dog!”

So, we can surely expect some comedic moments with the family’s pet pooch Dodger (ironically, Martin is a huge animal lover in real life – his own dog, Jim, sits cosily on his lap during our chat, before he starts throwing a ball for him to fetch).

Asked whether it’s easy to slip back into character after so many years playing him, Martin replies: “Funnily enough, no, because as I get older everything gets harder. So, it should be but it’s not, because of the ageing. But it (Port Isaac) is always a nice place to be, isn’t it?”

“A really nice place to be,” agrees Caroline, who has two children with her husband, actor Michael Higgs.

“When you walk on to the set and you’re there in the house and in the surgery, all of a sudden everything starts to come back.”

The last series of Doc Martin was on our screens in 2017; Caroline finds having a year out from the role “fantastic”.

“You never, ever tire of it. You come back and it’s always like this familiar world and we’re so lucky with incredible scripts, fantastic storylines.

“What’s brilliant about Philippa and Mark and the writers and the way they bring everything together is that nobody wants to repeat the same beats, so we’re always adding other possibilit­ies.

“Like the idea of Martin and Louisa being together at one point seemed impossible.”

Indeed, she’s always surprised by the scripts, suggesting that’s why Doc Martin has outlived many other comedy dramas (a genre which Martin notes was the “go-to TV show for that time of night” when it first aired in 2003).

“There’s always something that undercuts something else, but then there’s a real heart to it and serious medical stories through it and there’s romantic stories and a lot of comedy that has been built into the quirkiness of the characters, so it never feels forced,” suggests Caroline.

“It feels very natural. And that’s what gives it longevity, really.” Doc Martin starts on ITV on Wednesday at 9pm.

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 ??  ?? Hermione Gulliford as Dr Rebecca Hedden
Hermione Gulliford as Dr Rebecca Hedden
 ??  ?? Martin Clunes as Dr Martin, Caroline Catz as Louisa, Elliott Blake as James Henry
Martin Clunes as Dr Martin, Caroline Catz as Louisa, Elliott Blake as James Henry
 ??  ?? Louisa and Martin in a scene from the new series
Louisa and Martin in a scene from the new series

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