The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Ben Whislaw’s new drama is a love

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WHO would play you in a story of your life?” is a go-to dinner party conundrum. For most, the chances of that scenario playing out in the real world are slim to none. For doctor-turned-comedy writer Adam Kay, it’s a question that required an immediate and absolute answer: Ben Whishaw.

Best known for his roles as Q in the Bond franchise and Norman Scott in A Very English Scandal – Whishaw’s medical expertise, unlike Kay’s, is somewhat limited. That needn’t matter though, for what the actor lacks in prenatal knowledge, he more than makes up for in delivery – of lines and fictional babies.

Donning a set of scrubs and heading straight on to the set of a labour ward as part of new sevenpart BBC drama This Is Going To Hurt, the darkly comedic on-screen world is an adaptation of Kay’s multi-million selling memoir of the same name.

“I must be the only person in the country who hadn’t heard of it,” announces Whishaw, 41, with a slight shrug, describing his lack of prior knowledge as “a bit embarrassi­ng”.

After making up for lost time with the source material, Whishaw recounts the “extraordin­ary” experience of researchin­g the world of obstetrics and gynaecolog­y. Aided by three on-set medical advisers, a grand total of a “few afternoons” of hands-on training prepped the cast for filming courtesy of Covidinduc­ed lockdown measures.

“We’ve learned how to do Caesareans,” announces the actor. “I had no idea that it was as basic a process as it is. You literally take a scalpel and slice through the flesh, then you literally put your hands in and pull the muscles apart, and then you shove your fist in and grab the baby.” Dubbed a “love letter to the NHS” by Kay and Whishaw, the series was born out of Kay’s diary entries, scrawled between sleepless nights and endless overtime during his stint as a junior doctor.

Noting a direct adaptation of his diaries would have turned the series into what Kay describes as a “one-man sketch show”, the former doctor, 41, says the TV adaptation opted for a different route, expanding the world contained in the pages of his memoir.

Reassuring fans of the book that “the greatest hits are all here” – whether in the form of anecdotal monologues to camera or played-out scenes – Whishaw explains that the series and memoir “go hand in hand”.

“A lot of the humour that’s in the show is just drawn directly from real-life stuff that happened to Adam. And to a degree, a lot of the jokes are Adam’s way of coping, I suppose, with the pressures of being a doctor,” adds Whishaw. “I had no idea, really, of the pressures that these people are under.”

With directing duties shared between Lucy Forbes and Baftanomin­ated Tom Kingsley, the series

stars newcomer Ambika Mod as Shruti, a young junior doctor yet to be tainted by the stresses of hospital life.

Joined by Bafta-nominated

Alex Jennings (The Crown, A

Very English Scandal) as Adam’s domineerin­g boss Mr Lockhart, and Dame Harriet Walter (The Crown, Succession) as Veronique, Adam’s mother, This Is Going To Hurt has attracted a who’s who of acting talent. Like countless people up and down the country, Whishaw says the notion of stepping into a hospital fills him with “dread”. Despite this, it was a routine the actor quickly became accustomed to – albeit swapping a working hospital for the ultrareali­stic confines of a purpose-built set. Immersing himself in a world laden with prosthetic­s capable of inducing a “very visceral reaction”, the star recounts a number of particular­ly memorable scenes now permanentl­y ingrained in his brain.

“Some of the funniest ones have been, in the gynaecolog­y ward, having to remove various items from various orifices. They’ve been very funny... There was also a scene that I particular­ly love when a woman wants to eat her own placenta because she’s read that it’s a good thing for her and the baby, and, well, it gets messy.”

Highlighti­ng the comedic highs alongside the heart-wrenching lows of the profession, Kay’s work – both as an author and screenplay writer – reflects the NHS as it was when his diaries were first written in 2006. Describing some of the memoir’s fluid-drenched tales as “repulsive”, Kay says they depict the realities of a system “with all of its flaws”.

“The big thing in terms of changing things was making sure that I didn’t go to prison,” announces Kay in a matter-of-fact manner. “As a result I had to change a lot of the clinical situations... and also, I had to change a lot of people in my personal life, because I still want some of them to speak to me.”

And while Whishaw says he hopes viewers find themselves thoroughly entertaine­d by the series, he’s quick to highlight the show’s “really serious agenda – politicall­y and socially”.

“We’ve all been more aware than normal, probably, of just how much we owe to the people who work for the NHS. I feel like, in making the show, there’s a real sense of purpose amongst the cast and crew and everyone.”

This Is Going To Hurt, BBC1, Tuesday, 9pm.

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This Is Going To Hurt with Ben Whishaw as Adam
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