The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Bob and Paul angling for serious subjects

It may sound a little fishy but it’s not. Bob Mortimer and Paul Whitehouse tell Georgia Humphreys why their BBC series is about so much more than mere angling

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Mortimer & Whitehouse: Gone Fishing is a therapeuti­c show to watch for many reasons – the incredible scenery, the emotive music, the sense of being immersed in nature. But what is particular­ly comforting is how it shows “two fellas being open with each other”, something the stars themselves – comics Bob Mortimer and Paul Whitehouse – have realised viewers really appreciate.

It’s because they’re talking about topics which resonate with people, from overcoming serious illness – Mortimer had a triple heart bypass in 2015 after doctors discovered his arteries were “95% blocked” – to getting older and how it changes you.

“I was out in the street last night; this woman came up, who was walking her dog, and she said, ‘Oh, sorry, I recognise you – my husband, who suffers from depression, really loves your show’,” says 62-year-old Whitehouse, who was born in Wales but grew up in London.

“They (viewers) are very candid about their lives. Because the subject matter is so real and was so difficult for us – certainly Bob anyway – I think people with their own genuine problems really identify with it.”

In the first episode of the new series, the pair travel to the River Tweed in Scotland to continue their quest to catch a salmon.

We also witness Middlesbro­ugh-born Mortimer, 61, talking about the loss of his father, who died in a car crash when Mortimer was a toddler. “I think, for this third series, we probably open up even more than we did in the first two,” notes the star, famous for his work as a double act with Vic Reeves (such as their comedy panel game show Shooting Stars).

“People say, ‘You open up and you talk about very serious and personal things’, but we’re not ‘those sort of blokes’; we just happen to be at that time of life and we had the opportunit­y to do it in a very naturalist­ic way that is obviously going to help other people as well,” reasons Whitehouse, known for co-creating BBC sketch show The Fast Show.

With a chuckle, he adds: “So, we’ve had to become slightly better people!”

The pair are very jokey throughout our chat (especially when Mortimer reveals he’s a big fan of the Real Housewives, a franchise of reality TV series set across America).

But when I suggest that younger generation­s are becoming more accepting of men talking about their feelings and showing emotion, they agree – and take on a more earnest tone.

“The last show of the new series we did try and address specifical­ly what you’re talking about and we got a doctor who specialise­s in men’s health to come and just give some guidance to us that, hopefully, people can take something from as well,” recalls Mortimer.

“We talk in another episode about how we would never have hugged our parents or told our parents that we loved them or whatever, but I think that happens now.

“We try, a little bit grandly, to pass on the message, ‘If you haven’t told your mum, now might be the time to get it done’, or your daughter or son or whatever,” he explains.

Asked what else the doctor covered in their chat with him, Mortimer says: “Well, he was amazing at just really practical things. Men are a bit reluctant, especially to go to a doctor about emotional problems.

“So, he suggested an opening sentence you might like to use if you’re approachin­g your doctor. I think it was something like, ‘I’ve been feeling low for a while, and I didn’t know who to talk about it to’.”

Another interestin­g point they discuss is how, when it comes to heart problems, “females are terribly misdiagnos­ed”.

“They have pain in their chest, or some breathless­ness and the doctors don’t immediatel­y think it’s a heart problem.

“And even when it’s a crisis moment, the average time from a man thinking something’s wrong to them being in hospital, is about one hour 40, apparently. But with a woman, it’s nearly seven hours, because it doesn’t cross a 55-year-old woman’s mind as much that this could be a heart attack.”

Whitehouse has been a keen fisherman since he was young.

After he had a procedure to insert arterial stents in 2010, he found regular rehab exercise has helped his recovery – and one way to get out of the house was to teach long-time pal Mortimer how to fish.

It would seem novice Mortimer still has plenty of mishaps on the river – not just missed fish and missed opportunit­ies, but a lot of falls too. “So much we haven’t used because some of them – oddly enough, perfectly genuine falls because I’m terrible on my feet but when I’m on camera – they look a little bit contrived.”

He also ended up drifting down the River Wye, which is on the border between England and Wales, on a boat.

“That was slightly concerning, because you could hardly call it a boat. It wasn’t really seaworthy!” quips Whitehouse.

“There was a point I was meant to get off, so I was drifting away towards the Bristol Channel,” follows Mortimer. “But some nice anglers waded in and saved me. It was quite hairy actually! It’s a big, powerful river.”

The first half of the series (Episodes 2 is on the River Lea, and 3 is in Norfolk) was filmed pre-lockdown, in autumn 2019.

The remaining three episodes (covering the River Test in Hampshire, Wiltshire and Wye) were filmed once lockdown had been lifted for angling.

On what it was like shooting with social distancing measures in place, Mortimer says: “You have these instructio­ns – the BBC have an organisati­on that looks after your Covid requiremen­ts.

“So, yes, it’s a very different experience for the crew and everything. But, for me and Paul, it kind of didn’t change much because we don’t sit on top of each other, we’re sat on a riverbank. We had to keep away from each other in the accommodat­ion and so on.

“I should imagine it would be a nightmare for most shows. But we’re so lucky because fishing, it doesn’t cause too many problems.”

Mortimer & Whitehouse: Gone Fishing returns to BBC Two on Sunday August 23.

 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? Bob Mortimer, left, and Paul Whitehouse rekindling their friendship and their mutual love of fishing.
Pictures: PA. Bob Mortimer, left, and Paul Whitehouse rekindling their friendship and their mutual love of fishing.
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