The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

DRAMA HITS HARD

- With Paul Whitelaw

PREVIEWS TOP

PICK

Three Families -

BBC1, Monday and Tuesday, 9pm

The Abortion Act 1967 made abortion legal in the UK, but that legislatio­n didn’t extend to Northern Ireland. This vital drama is based around the true stories of some of the people involved in a campaign to reverse injustice and change society. It begins in 2013. Theresa (Sinead Keenan) believes that abortion is a mortal sin, but then her teenage daughter becomes pregnant. She makes a decision, borne of a mother’s love, that could see her facing a prison sentence for breaking an archaic law. Meanwhile, a young couple are told that their baby is expected to be stillborn. They’re given no other option. Sensitive and angering, Three Families is wreathed in authentici­ty. It hits hard. It lingers.

Unbeatable -

BBC1, Monday to Friday, 2.15pm

This generic daytime quiz show is almost fascinatin­gly undercooke­d and lacking in atmosphere. Your host is Jason Manford, who goes through the motions with the genial confidence of a man who knows that he’s landed an easy gig. The rules don’t matter, it’s just a procession of general knowledge questions. The weird production details are of far more interest. Unbeatable is haunted by listless canned applause that sounds like it’s been beamed in from a crypt full of Ray Harryhause­n skeletons. I’m all for social distancing, but Manford is so far away from the contestant­s they may as well have stuffed him in a capsule orbiting the moon. But, you know, there are worse ways to spend an afternoon.

Between The Covers - BBC2, Monday, 7.30pm

A cosy little show, Between The Covers is a televised book club in which Sara Cox and some celebs review the latest big releases while talking about their own personal favourites. The guests this week are Mel Giedroyc, Griff Rhys Jones, TV presenter Rick Edwards and Oti Mabuse from Strictly Come Dancing. The tomes under review are The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett and The Fine Art Of Invisible Detection by Robert Goddard. Meanwhile, Giedroyc heartily recommends all 900 pages of Les Miserables. This is nothing more than an unpretenti­ous piece of schedule filler, but sometimes that’s all you need. Also, it reminds me that Cox is an excellent broadcaste­r. She’s charming, funny and natural.

Inside No 9 -

BBC2, Monday, 9.30pm

I’m a big fan of Inside No 9, but the latest series kicks off with an absolute misfire. A parody of overly stylised British heist thrillers combined with commedia dell’arte, it’s meta-textual to a fault. The fourth wall is constantly broken. “It’s series six,” smirks our nominal narrator, “you have got to allow for a certain artistic exhaustion.” Which would be funny if the episode as a whole wasn’t so terribly laboured and pleased with itself. It exists purely to comment upon the expectatio­ns that Pemberton and Shearsmith have built up over the years. I get what they’re trying to do – it’s hardly subtle – but as a post-modern experiment it just doesn’t work. Oh well. Better luck next time.

Hospital - BBC2, Tuesday, 9pm

The latest series of this superior medical report was filmed in the Coventry hospital that delivered the world’s first Covid vaccine outside of a trial. Nearly five million people in England are waiting to start treatment, forcing doctors into the difficult position of having to decide who should be treated first. It’s not a decision they take lightly. Patients who can’t afford to go private are stuck on a vast waiting list. NHS staff can only apologise – there’s nothing they can do. This typically humane episode captures the intense frustratio­ns of an NHS coping with the huge challenge of recovering itself one year into the pandemic. “It doesn’t feel like we’re anywhere near back to normal,” sighs one consultant.

Davina Mccall: Sex, Myths And The Menopause - Channel 4, Wednesday, 9pm

In this commendabl­e programme, Mccall highlights the failings of menopause care and finds out what can be done to improve the lives of menopausal women. The main problem is a lack of proper informatio­n and a continuing distrust of hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT), a stigma largely based on a misleading yet widely publicised report from 20 years ago. Mccall meets experts who want to put those fears to rest. They also stress that antidepres­sants are no substitute for the benefits of HRT. The key message is this: we must continue to talk, listen and learn. “You don’t have to be menopausal,” says Mccall. “You don’t have to be a woman. This is something everybody needs to know.”

Saved By A Stranger - BBC2, Thursday, 9pm

As this compassion­ate series continues, we meet two more ordinary people who survived traumatic events thanks to the life-changing help of others. David, a veteran of the Falklands conflict, was aboard the SS Atlantic Conveyer when it was set ablaze and sunk by an Exocet missile attack. Twelve men lost their lives. David now wants to reunite with some of his fellow crew members as a way of stressing how important it is to talk when you struggle with PTSD. We also meet Darryl, who was four when his family fled Kenya for a new life in Britain. They discovered a country mired in vicious racism, but Darryl’s primary school teachers gave him the confidence to succeed in a hostile society.

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 ??  ?? NO ATMOSPHERE: Jason Manford hosts the daytime quiz show.
NO ATMOSPHERE: Jason Manford hosts the daytime quiz show.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Three Families; Davina Mccall: Sex, Myths And The Menopause; and Between The Covers.
Clockwise from top: Three Families; Davina Mccall: Sex, Myths And The Menopause; and Between The Covers.

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