The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Carers give much more than a Helping Hand

- DAVID POLLOCK

Novelist and playwright Cathy Forde’s new audio drama Helping Hands was inspired by workshoppi­ng conversati­ons with her friend, the actor Charlene Boyd, who has ended up performing in the finished piece.

The audio play is about a relationsh­ip between a young care worker and an older woman who doesn’t want to lose her independen­ce.

Pre-pandemic, the pair were working on a play which Boyd has ended up taking on herself, but their conversati­ons got Forde thinking about a subject close to her heart.

“We both knew these women who are quite old, maybe getting physically frail, but intellectu­ally sharp and astute,” says Forde. “They like their own houses, they like their independen­ce and they’ve got huge personal dignity.

“The last thing they want is to have to go into a hospital. They don’t want to be investigat­ed, they don’t want their lives to be prolonged, they don’t want treatment that’s only going to make their life harder.

“This was pre-pandemic, and since then, the whole idea of elderly people going into hospital for treatment is even worse. From that we were chatting and telling stories about my mum – who, when I conceived the play, was still alive but she died during lockdown – and Charlene’s granny, and the things they said.

“I ended up developing this robust older character, Hilda.”

Next, the pair wondered how this older lady might be able to talk to a younger person if she lived alone.

“We came up with the idea of a care worker, and that’s where the younger woman, Rose, came from,” says Forde. “Then, when it branched off into my play, I conceived the story of Hilda realising she’d had a really bad fall and broken her hip, and would end up in the care system in hospital, or probably in a nursing home after it.

“She knows that’s the last thing she wants. Her response is, ‘right, I know where this is going…’ She knows the last thing she wants is for the medics to come and take her to A&E, because that will be the end of her living at home and of her independen­ce. She’ll just be an old lady on a hospital ward.”

Alongside Boyd as Rose, the great Maureen Beattie is playing Hilda. As those who saw the Channel 4 drama Help will recognise, dramatists are taking on more stories about those in caring profession­s since the pandemic began. For Forde, it was already an intensely personal subject.

“I love characters,” she says. “Anything I write starts with creating threedimen­sional characters, and I take nuggets from things I know have happened. My husband has early-onset Alzheimer’s, and I had no idea what support workers and care workers were, apart from people that turned up at your house. I thought they just dressed and washed you but, in actual fact, it’s an extraordin­ary vocational occupation for the people that can do it well.

“The guys that look after my husband are incredible men. I had no idea until I became a service user myself,” she continues.

“I would never have created the character of Rose if I hadn’t met support workers and seen the way they interact and build a relationsh­ip. The character of Hilda is intellectu­ally tip-top, Rose is really just looking after her physical needs, but I’m experienci­ng guys that have to look after somebody who’s helpless, and I see the extraordin­ary way they work with my husband. That’s where Rose comes from. There’s a lot in the media about how essential support and care workers are, and how there’s a shortage and the care system suffers because they’re undervalue­d and leaving the profession.

“It’s weird. It all seems quite prescient now, but when I was writing the play that wasn’t the situation. It feels as if it’s chiming with the mood of the times.”

As well as the subject matter, Forde is happy to be giving voice to characters who might need it.

“The two women in this play are slightly invisible,” she says. “As you get older you become more anonymous, you sort of become invisible. But nobody’s anonymous. You’ve got your past and your history. We’ve just dismantled my mum’s house and her whole life was there. Every single thing channelled a memory.

“So I like celebratin­g people that are a bit unnoticed. It’s really important.”

Helping Hands is available through Pitlochry Festival Theatre’s Sound Stage between Friday and Sunday November 2628. Tickets and info at pitlochryf­estivalthe­atre.com

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 ?? ?? YOUNG AND OLD: Cathy Forde’s Helping Hands focuses on a carer and client.
YOUNG AND OLD: Cathy Forde’s Helping Hands focuses on a carer and client.
 ?? ?? Charlene Boyd, left, and Maureen Beattie.
Charlene Boyd, left, and Maureen Beattie.

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