Features
True Charity
She may not be dressed to thrill, but Charity Wakefield
tells Gemma Quade that she was amazed by the
true life tales of an Edwardian nurse in Casualty 1907
CHARITY Wakefield
seems to have spent
most of the last 12
months in a corset. In
January we saw her
take on the role of
Marianne Dashwood in the BBCs
lush adaptation of Jane Austens
Sense And Sensibility, and now shes
back as an Edwardian nurse in
Casualty 1907.
It was actually quite an intense
experience wearing those uniforms,
says the 27-year-old of her nurses
costume. You are so strapped in.
Youve got really thick tights, youve
got all your undergarments and
youve got a very difficult corset to
wear.
In Sense And Sensibility the
corsets were tight, they are ones
that want to pull in your rib cage
because the dresses are empire line,
but the Edwardian ones come much
higher and much lower, so they
actually constrict your walking. The
breathing is right from the bottom
of your lung to the top, so you dont
have any choice but to be calm and
collected as a woman, she laughs.
You cant run around and be silly.
It forces you to be demure, which is
really not very easy for us modern
women.
Wakefield plays probationary
nurse Ethel Bennett in Casualty
1907, a follow-up to Casualty 1906.
Ethel actually existed 100 years ago,
and the drama has been constructed
from her diaries, as well as those of
other medical staff in the Royal
London Hospital, and hospital
records and newspapers.
Ethel is new to the East End
hospital, and its clear from the
beginning that she is intelligent,
ambitious and instinctive. When Dr
Culpin (William Houston) takes her
out in an ambulance to go to rescue
some men trapped in St Katherines
Docks, something that would have
been against the rules for a nurse at
the time, she takes it all on the chin.
Her role is more pastoral than
medical, Wakefield explains. Shes
there as a look-out and if she notices
something is wrong, she has to go
through all the ranks to be able to
tell anybody important. But she
pushes the boundaries, almost like a
young suffragette, because she
wants to be a doctor. Shes unusual
because she doesnt just accept the
way things are, she wants to be one
of the people to try and change it.
Its that refreshing attitude that
leads Dr Culpin to take a shine to
Ethel. In Edwardian times, it was
forbidden for nurses to become
engaged to doctors, and in Casualty
1906 we saw Nurse Ada Russell,
played by Sarah Smart, having to
make a tough decision between her
burgeoning career and her love for
Dr Walton (Tom Riley). The news is
out that, in real life, Ethel and Dr
Culpin married and Wakefield says:
Its amazing to play a woman of
that time who falls for somebody
because of a meeting of minds,
because she has a similar outlook in
life, she says. Even though shes
young and making mistakes, he sees
in her somebody who has the
potential to do something, and if
anybody in those times was going to
change the role of women in society,
it would be people like her.
The role of women was certainly
different in Edwardian times, and so
too were the procedures in hospital.
Anesthetic had only just made an
appearance, and although it may
sound ridiculous in 2008, the Matron
at the Royal London was among the
first to take on Florence
Nightingales advice of keeping
everything clean and sanitised.
Conditions were tough C the
average life expectancy was just 45,
and if you did end up in hospital you
could expect some pretty severe
treatment.
Later on in the three-part series,
we see the hospital struggling with
funding. At the time the NHS didnt
exist, and the Royal London was one
of the first hospitals to provide free
care for poor and rich alike.
The NHS is something you
absolutely take for granted, and
everyone feels at liberty to moan
about it all the time, Wakefield
points out. But sometimes you
think, God we dont realise what
weve got.
While Wakefield hadnt had much
experience of hospital herself before
filming, a sad event during the
summer when Casualty 1907 was
filmed made her realise just how
much the work of NHS staff should
be appreciated.
My grandfather died in the
summer, she says. I hadnt really
been in hospital before very much at
all, and then found myself travelling
up to Liverpool to work in a thing
about a hospital and then coming all
the way down to East Sussex to be
with my grandfather in a hospital. It
was very sad and obviously really
resonated.
Being there for quite long
periods of time and watching how
people cared for my grandfather in
the modern day, I realised that in
some ways, things havent changed.
Nurses are absolutely amazing; they
are multi-talented and they have
this skill of being able to understand
what somebody needs, whether
thats being gentle, giving somebody
a kick up the bum, joking and
making people laugh or just being
full of energy.
I dont think Id be able to be a
nurse, I dont think Im made of the
right stuff.
ö Casualty 1907, BBC1, Sunday,
9pm
10:54am Thursday 27th March 2008
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