New York Post

SPIRITED TEEN

‘In My Skin’: new dramedy recounts a journey of selfdiscov­ery

- By MICHAEL STARR

IT’S tricky to mine humor from the dark shroud of mental illness, but “In My

Skin” takes a sensitive approach to the subject — and pulls it off with aplomb.

The five-episode BBC series, premiering July 30 on Hulu, follows 16year-old Bethan (Gabrielle Creevy), a Welsh highschool­er who’s best friends with Travis (James Wilbraham) and the outrageous, game-for-anything Lydia

(Poppy Lee Friar). At first blush, Bethan appears to be a well-adjusted, talented student with a flair for writing poetry and a keen, sometimes bawdy sense of humor often targeted at the school’s authority figures.

But Bethan’s sunny facade masks a secret she’s kept from her friends: her home life is a shambolic mess. She tells Travis and Lydia that her mother is “really shy” and that her father is a harmless “tax officer.” In reality, Bethan’s mother, Katrina (Jo Hartley), is mentally ill and given to violent, psychotic episodes (including washing her car in the dead of night) that land her in a locked hospital ward. Her father, Dilwyn (Rhodri Meilier), is a loutish, drunken biker with no discernibl­e income who doesn’t lift a finger to help his sick wife — or Bethan, who hates him. Only her warmhearte­d grandmothe­r, Nan (Di Botcher), has her best interests at heart. She wants Bethan to come and live with her for the time being and extricate herself from her chaotic situation.

As the series progresses and Bethan’s journey continues, we get a deeper sense of the pain and humiliatio­n she carries around with her, even as there are some bright spots along the way vis a vis her poetry and expanding her circle of friends with

Poppy (Zadeia Campbell-Davies), one of the school’s “popular girls” whose flirtation with Bethan — at first seemingly shallow and trivial — morphs into something deeper.

There are several reasons that “In My Skin” won a 2019 BAFTA award in Wales for Best Television Drama. To start with, Creevy provides a multifacet­ed prism through which the series, created and written by Kayleigh Llewellyn, refracts its darkness and light. You can feel Bethan’s pain and embarrassm­ent while reveling in her successess and in her everyday teen angst, which include her brushes with knucklehea­d class bully Stan Priest (Aled ap Steffan) and her tenuous relationsh­ips with the school faculty. Creevy’s chemistry with co-stars Wilbraham and Friar is believable and heartfelt; the trio communicat­es in that insular way only close friends can, and Botcher’s Nan is the kind of grandmothe­r any young adult would like to have around.

None of this would work, of course, without Llewellyn’s sensitivit­y as a writer; her ability to mix pathos with humor is the biggest reason that “In My Skin” makes for an enjoyable, thought-provoking series.

 ??  ?? Gabrielle Creevy (left). Below: co-stars Poppy Lee Friar and James Wilbraham.
Gabrielle Creevy (left). Below: co-stars Poppy Lee Friar and James Wilbraham.
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