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Call the Midwife film tours at Historic Dockyard, Chatham

It may have disappeared from our screens but you can still step into the world of 1950s nostalgia and visit the location of the BBC’s Call the Midwife series.

Although it is set in London, Kent can claim it as a home drama because Chatham’s Historic Dockyard has doubled as Poplar Dock in 1950s London since the beginning.

Its sixth series signed off from our screens earlier this year, with some 9 million viewers tuning in to see a birth, a death and a marriage. And the BBC has commissioned three more series so you will be able to get your fix next year.

Scenes from Call the Midwife are filmed at Chatham's Historic Dockyard
Scenes from Call the Midwife are filmed at Chatham's Historic Dockyard
Helen George as Trixie Franklin in Call the Midwife
Helen George as Trixie Franklin in Call the Midwife

In the meantime, you can step into the midwives’ lives and find yourself right on the set.

The dockyard runs its Call the Midwife tours every year, on selected days from March to October, tickets for which get snapped up quickly. Visitors are shown round by their very own midwife, in 1950s costume, who will take them round the locations to see the familiar spaces used in filming.

The knowledgeable guides – who all keep abreast of the latest Call the Midwife goings-on – can also tell visitors which scenes have been filmed where, including from the most recent series.

Some of the 90-minute tours also include afternoon tea taken in the Commissioners’ House – another location used on screen.

Call the Midwife's Christmas special was the most watched programme on Christmas Day. Picture: Neal Street Productions, Coco Van Oppens
Call the Midwife's Christmas special was the most watched programme on Christmas Day. Picture: Neal Street Productions, Coco Van Oppens

THE HISTORY

We were first transported back to the 1950s with the midwives in 2012, when the show premiered on BBC1.

It follows the lives of a group of midwives working in the poverty-stricken East End of London during the 1950s, and is based on the bestselling memoirs of Jennifer Worth.
Adapted by Heidi Thomas, its midwives work alongside the community of nuns who are nurses at Nonnatus House.

Over the years it has had Kent connections among its cast. Canterbury’s Pam Ferris starred as Sister Evangelina, who left the series last year when her non-nonsense character died, and Miranda Hart, whose cousin is Lullingstone Castle’s Tom Hart Dyke. She left the series in 2015. In 2014, the Maidstone Singers appeared in the drama, as part of the Poplar Choral Society.

Stars of the show include Strictly star Helen George and Jenny Agutter as Sister Julienne. The series, produced by Neal Street Productions, hasn’t shied away from controversial subjects, and has dealt with subjects including female genital mutilation and Thalidomide.

Call the Midwife was shot at Chatham's Historic Dockyard. Picture: Laurence Cendrowicz
Call the Midwife was shot at Chatham's Historic Dockyard. Picture: Laurence Cendrowicz

THE DETAILS

Call the Midwife tours are held at Chatham’s Historic Dockyard until Sunday, October 16.

Tickets cost £16 and £12.50 for children, and for a tour and afternoon tea costs £33 and £32 for children.

To book, visit thedockyard.co.uk/whats-on or call 01634 823200.

The tours run all summer until October
The tours run all summer until October
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