Irish Daily Mirror

Med for it

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There was a double blow for Doctor Who’s army of anxious devotees on Tuesday.

In the morning, Ben Whishaw assured Lorraine Kelly on ITV that there was absolutely no chance of him succeeding Jodie Whittaker.

That evening, in BBC1’S new medical drama This Is Going To Hurt, he let the fandom look at what they could have won, with an outstandin­g performanc­e that showcased many of the skills required by any prospectiv­e pilot of the TARDIS.

Wit, verve, comic timing, sensitivit­y, pig-headedness and that special something which we are probably no longer allowed to call geeky attractive­ness.

Unless Whishaw is in the business of lying to a fellow thespian, we must accept that what he told Lorraine was correct.

In any case, if the opening episode of This Is Going To Hurt was anything to go by, Whishaw could be far too busy playing a medical doctor.

It’s an adaptation of Adam Kay’s best selling autobiogra­phical novel which you may have been advised to read because “It’s a bit gruesome, but I think you’ll enjoy it.”

I haven’t read the book, but the TV version was very eye-popping – well, unless you grew up on Jed Mercurio’s Bodies and Channel 4’s

One Born Every Minute – and I did really enjoy it.

It set its stall out early on as the exhausted and frustrated acting registrar Kay (Whishaw) described his workplace, the obstetrics and gynaecolog­y ward, as “Brats and tw*ts”. (By happy coincidenc­e, that line aired while The Brits was on ITV).

The combinatio­n of gallows humour and bloody gore is not the most shocking and disturbing thing about this fourparter though.

No, what really strikes you is that it is set in 2006, long before Brexit, Covid and our current Tory overlords began doing their stuff.

I mean, if NHS staff and patients had it this tough back then…

 ?? ?? DOC AND ROLE Ben Whishaw as Adam Kay
DOC AND ROLE Ben Whishaw as Adam Kay

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