Casualty 1900s
Encyclopedia
Casualty 1900s is a British hospital drama spin-off miniseries, broadcast by the BBC
BBC
The British Broadcasting Corporation is a British public service broadcaster. Its headquarters is at Broadcasting House in the City of Westminster, London. It is the largest broadcaster in the world, with about 23,000 staff...

.

It plunges the viewer into the Receiving Room - a similar concept to today's Accident and Emergency
Emergency department
An emergency department , also known as accident & emergency , emergency room , emergency ward , or casualty department is a medical treatment facility specialising in acute care of patients who present without prior appointment, either by their own means or by ambulance...

 - of The London Hospital
Royal London Hospital
The Royal London Hospital was founded in September 1740 and was originally named The London Infirmary. The name changed to The London Hospital in 1748 and then to The Royal London Hospital on its 250th anniversary in 1990. The first patients were treated at a house in Featherstone Street,...

 deep in the teeming East End
East End of London
The East End of London, also known simply as the East End, is the area of London, England, United Kingdom, east of the medieval walled City of London and north of the River Thames. Although not defined by universally accepted formal boundaries, the River Lea can be considered another boundary...

. The drama is shot with the pace and action of its modern day counterpart and namesake, Casualty
Casualty (TV series)
Casualty, stylised as Casual+y, is a British weekly television show broadcast on BBC One, and the longest-running emergency medical drama television series in the world. Created by Jeremy Brock and Paul Unwin, it was first broadcast on 6 September 1986, and transmitted in the UK on BBC One. The...

, but every case and character is based on cases, characters and events taken from the actual hospital records, nurse's Ward Diaries and intimate memoirs. Casualty 1909, like its preceding series, is an unbroken experience of life with pioneering doctors and nurses a hundred years ago amongst the desperately poor.

It began with a single episode of Casualty 1906, followed by three episodes of Casualty 1907, and six episodes of Casualty 1909.

Episode one

Nurse Ada Russell has to decide whether or not to take the job of Ward Sister
Sibling
Siblings are people who share at least one parent. A male sibling is called a brother; and a female sibling is called a sister. In most societies throughout the world, siblings usually grow up together and spend a good deal of their childhood socializing with one another...

 of Wellington ward, as it threatens to spoil her engagement to Dr James Walton. The hospital is using a radical new technique, ultra-violet light
Ultraviolet
Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than X-rays, in the range 10 nm to 400 nm, and energies from 3 eV to 124 eV...

, to treat skin disease caused by unsanitary living conditions in the East End
East End of London
The East End of London, also known simply as the East End, is the area of London, England, United Kingdom, east of the medieval walled City of London and north of the River Thames. Although not defined by universally accepted formal boundaries, the River Lea can be considered another boundary...

. Queen Alexandra
Alexandra of Denmark
Alexandra of Denmark was the wife of Edward VII of the United Kingdom...

 visits with her sister the dowager empress of Russia to see the hospital.

Episode two

Probationer Ethel Bennett goes through a night of rising tension as she nurses Thomas Hooley, the injured docker whose leg wounds are not healing. She clashes with ward sister Ada Russell, who is overwhelmed by the strain of running of a large, busy ward and worried about her true feelings for her fiance. Nobby Clark, leader of the violent Blind Beggar Gang, is hospitalised with alcoholic cirrhosis
Cirrhosis
Cirrhosis is a consequence of chronic liver disease characterized by replacement of liver tissue by fibrosis, scar tissue and regenerative nodules , leading to loss of liver function...

 of the liver, aged just 15. Driven mad by cravings and nightmares, his path crosses with Ada with unexpected results.

Episode three

With the hospital facing imminent financial collapse, chairman Sydney Holland
Sydney Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford
Sydney George Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford was a British barrister and peer.-Biography:Knutsford was the eldest twin son of the Conservative politician Henry Thurstan Holland, 1st Viscount Knutsford, and his wife Elizabeth Margaret Hibbert. His grandfather was the physician and travel writer...

 launches an inspired campaign to raise money. The cost of building the modern city is revealed when workers on the new Rotherhithe Tunnel
Rotherhithe Tunnel
The Rotherhithe Tunnel is a road tunnel crossing beneath the River Thames in East London. It connects the Ratcliff district of Limehouse in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets north of the river to Rotherhithe in the London Borough of Southwark south of the river. It is designated as the A101...

 are admitted with agonising diver's bends. Ethel, working in the receiving room, contracts scarlet fever
Scarlet fever
Scarlet fever is a disease caused by exotoxin released by Streptococcus pyogenes. Once a major cause of death, it is now effectively treated with antibiotics...

 from a patient.

Episode One

Revolution grips the East End as an explosion brings fears of a bomb, and Ethel Bennett and Dr Millais Culpin struggle to control the angry victims. When detectives arrive, Matron Luckes and Chairman Sydney Holland fear the hospital is in danger of becoming an extension of Scotland Yard. Meanwhile, Sister Ada Russell battles with irascible star surgeon Mr Henry Dean, whose addiction to cocaine is an open secret. And ambitious young Dr Ingrams faces catastrophe in the operating theatre.

Episode Two

A scandal brews as Nurse Goodley suspects that Mr Dean is ignoring the terrible side-effects of a new anaesthetic, and battles internally as whether she should risk everything and turn whistleblower. Sister Ada Russell copes with her first day in reception following reassignment. Nurse Bennett fears that her secret alliance with Dr Culpin has been discovered when Matron Luckes sends her into private nursing.

Episode Three

The strain of being 'married to the hospital' takes its toll on Sister Ada Russell, as she nears collapse. On one of the London's Jewish wards, Nurse Goodley finds herself increasingly drawn to the charismatic radical Saul Landau - but Saul has a life-threatening illness.

Episode Four

Sister Russell discovers the secret of probationer Nellie Bowers when she catches her sneaking out to see a mysterious young man. The London admits a woman brought in wearing pauper's clothes yet with silk underwear underneath. Meanwhile, the brilliant pioneer Dr Henry Head
Henry Head
Sir Henry Head, FRS was an English neurologist who conducted pioneering work into the somatosensory system and sensory nerves. Much of this work was conducted on himself, in collaboration with the psychiatrist W. H. R. Rivers, by severing and reconnecting sensory nerves and mapping how sensation...

 commits to performing a dangerous experiment on himself.

Episode Five

Dr Culpin is powerless to help when Ethel Bennett rushes to her dying brother in a naval hospital. Star surgeon Mr Dean faces destruction through his cocaine addiction. Sister Russell breaks the strict rules of Matron Luckes when she sneaks out of the London to help a young mother.

Episode Six

All the secrets burst open, as Matron Luckes clashes with Sister Russell for leaving the London to help a family in the slums, while Dr Culpin clashes with Bennett for giving up studying to be a doctor. Mr Dean, supposedly clean, returns to work in the Operating Theatre. In the dead of night a sweatshop
Sweatshop
Sweatshop is a negatively connoted term for any working environment considered to be unacceptably difficult or dangerous. Sweatshop workers often work long hours for very low pay, regardless of laws mandating overtime pay or a minimum wage. Child labour laws may be violated. Sweatshops may have...

 catches fire, bringing in scores of injured children, and the staff struggle to avert tragedy.

Medicine as portrayed in Casualty 1900s

Casualty 1900s portrays the use of early Anesthesia
Anesthesia
Anesthesia, or anaesthesia , traditionally meant the condition of having sensation blocked or temporarily taken away...

, predominately Chloroform
Chloroform
Chloroform is an organic compound with formula CHCl3. It is one of the four chloromethanes. The colorless, sweet-smelling, dense liquid is a trihalomethane, and is considered somewhat hazardous...

 and Ether
Diethyl ether
Diethyl ether, also known as ethyl ether, simply ether, or ethoxyethane, is an organic compound in the ether class with the formula . It is a colorless, highly volatile flammable liquid with a characteristic odor...

, the first standardised use of Spinal anesthesia, and the growing need for trained Anesthetists. No electronical equipment means doctors have to physically check a patents pulse
Pulse
In medicine, one's pulse represents the tactile arterial palpation of the heartbeat by trained fingertips. The pulse may be palpated in any place that allows an artery to be compressed against a bone, such as at the neck , at the wrist , behind the knee , on the inside of the elbow , and near the...

 during surgery. CPR
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is an emergency procedure which is performed in an effort to manually preserve intact brain function until further measures are taken to restore spontaneous blood circulation and breathing in a person in cardiac arrest. It is indicated in those who are unresponsive...

 is largely based on the Silvester Method in which a patents arms are raised above their head and then back down in an effort to stimulate muscles.

With Penicillin
Penicillin
Penicillin is a group of antibiotics derived from Penicillium fungi. They include penicillin G, procaine penicillin, benzathine penicillin, and penicillin V....

 still undiscovered, infections such as Erysipelas
Erysipelas
Erysipelas is an acute streptococcus bacterial infection of the deep epidermis with lymphatic spread.-Risk factors:...

 are largely incurable. Emphasis is placed on keeping wards and operating theatres clean.

The hospital is shown to have an X-ray room complete with X-ray machine. At the time protection against radiation
Radiation
In physics, radiation is a process in which energetic particles or energetic waves travel through a medium or space. There are two distinct types of radiation; ionizing and non-ionizing...

 emitted from such a machine was inadequate, little more than a thick pair of gloves was standard. Ernest Wilson, portrayed by Jason Watkins, was one of Britain’s first Radiologists
Radiology
Radiology is a medical specialty that employs the use of imaging to both diagnose and treat disease visualized within the human body. Radiologists use an array of imaging technologies to diagnose or treat diseases...

 and is shown with burns
Radiation burn
A radiation burn is damage to the skin or other biological tissue caused by exposure to radio frequency energy or ionizing radiation.The most common type of radiation burn is a sunburn caused by UV radiation. High exposure to X-rays during diagnostic medical imaging or radiotherapy can also result...

 to both hands due to the unsafe levels he must work with.

Broadcast

Casualty 1907 was broadcast on BBC One
BBC One
BBC One is the flagship television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 2 November 1936 as the BBC Television Service, and was the world's first regular television service with a high level of image resolution...

. After the initial broadcast of each episode, they were repeated four days afterwards but only in certain areas.
Episode Channel Broadcast Date Viewer avg. Share Refs
One BBC One
BBC One
BBC One is the flagship television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 2 November 1936 as the BBC Television Service, and was the world's first regular television service with a high level of image resolution...

30 March 2008 6.7 million 27%
Two BBC One 6 April 2008 5.3 million 22%
Three BBC One 13 April 2008 3.5 million 14%


Casualty 1909 was broadcast on Sunday nights through June and July 2009 at 9pm on BBC One
BBC One
BBC One is the flagship television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 2 November 1936 as the BBC Television Service, and was the world's first regular television service with a high level of image resolution...

 and - a first for the Casualty 1900s series - BBC HD
BBC HD
BBC HD is a high-definition television network provided by the BBC. The service was initially run as a trial from 15 May 2006 until becoming a full service on 1 December 2007...

.
February 2011 Saw the series broadcast on BBC Entertainment in Europe, South Africa, U.A.E & Israel as London Hospital.
Episode Broadcast date Channels Viewer avg. Share Refs
One 14 June 2009 BBC One
BBC One
BBC One is the flagship television channel of the British Broadcasting Corporation in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 2 November 1936 as the BBC Television Service, and was the world's first regular television service with a high level of image resolution...

 & BBC HD
BBC HD
BBC HD is a high-definition television network provided by the BBC. The service was initially run as a trial from 15 May 2006 until becoming a full service on 1 December 2007...

3.5 million 16%
Two 21 June 2009 BBC One & BBC HD 3.1 million 13%
Three 28 June 2009 BBC One & BBC HD 3.1 million 13%
Four 5 July 2009 BBC One & BBC HD 3.3 million 14%
Five 12 July 2009 BBC One & BBC HD 2.9 million 12%
Six 19 July 2009 BBC One & BBC HD 3.3 million 15%

DVD release

The complete Casualty 1900s series has been released on Region 2 DVD in the UK. The DVD comprises Casualty 1906, Casualty 1907 and Casualty 1909.

Casualty 1906

  • Tim Baker
    Tim Baker
    Tim Baker is an Australian journalist specialising in surf culture. He has twice received the Australian Surfing Hall of FameCulture Award, and is a former editor of Tracks and Australia's Surfing Life magazines...

     as Begging Boy
  • Paul Brightwell as Mr. Hills
  • Nigel Cooke as Dr. Burgess
  • Dorothy Duffy as Nurse Rafferty
  • Bella Emberg
    Bella Emberg
    Bella Emberg is a British actress probably best known for her appearances on The Benny Hill Show and The Russ Abbot Show, where she notably played Blunderwoman...

     as Mrs. Hard Up
  • Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell is an English stage, film and television actor. His early screen career included the role of Aubrey Montague in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire. In 1983, he starred as Edmund Bertram in a television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel, Mansfield Park...

     as Sydney Holland
    Sydney Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford
    Sydney George Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford was a British barrister and peer.-Biography:Knutsford was the eldest twin son of the Conservative politician Henry Thurstan Holland, 1st Viscount Knutsford, and his wife Elizabeth Margaret Hibbert. His grandfather was the physician and travel writer...

  • Ronnie Fox as Policeman
  • Fiona Gillies
    Fiona Gillies
    Fiona Gillies is a British actress who has appeared on television and the stage.She first appeared in the 1988 version of The Hound of the Baskervilles as Beryl Stapleton. A year later she appeared in the mini-series Mother Love....

     as Minnie Piatkov
  • Colin Heber-Percy as Gould
  • Rebecca Johnson as Sister Spencer
  • Hattie Ladbury as Miss Kenneally
  • Elliot Levey
    Elliot Levey
    -Biography:He is notable for his work in television, film and theatre - this has included the 2004 revival of the National Theatre production of His Dark Materials and the premieres of the musical Take Flight and the Bennett play The Habit of Art , along with Robespierre in Danton's Death...

     as Abe Goldman
  • Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie M. Lunghi is an English film, television and theatre actress. She is probably best known for her role as Guinevere in the 1981 film Excalibur, as football manageress Gabriella Benson in the 1990s television series The Manageress and for starring in a series of adverts for Kenco coffee. She...

     as Matron Eva Luckes
    Eva Luckes
    Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was Matron of The London Hospital from 1880 to 1919.-Early life:Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was born in Exeter, Devon on 8 July 1854 into an upper middle class family. Her father, Henry Richard Luckes, was a banker who had established a comfortable home for his family...

  • John Maude as Sailor
  • Tamzin Merchant
    Tamzin Merchant
    Tamzin Merchant is an English actress. She is known for her role as Georgiana Darcy in Pride & Prejudice and for her role as the ill-fated Queen Catherine Howard in The Tudors.-Career:...

     as Probationer Eastwood
  • Cathy Murphy
    Cathy Murphy
    Cathy Murphy is a British actress who studied at the Sylvia Young Theatre School. She played the role of Lorna in 1991, a love interest of Mark Fowler in soap opera EastEnders. In 2005 she returned to play the recurring role of Trisha Taylor. She had earlier played the ongoing role of Cheryl...

     as Mrs. Sarah Hills
  • Connor Quilty as Teddy
  • Tom Riley as Dr. James Walton
  • Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart is an English actress.Smart was born in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Her career started as a child, notably in the television series Woof!. She is best known for a series of well-regarded television roles including Virginia Braithwaite, daughter of a lottery winning family in...

     as Nurse Ada Russell
  • Hywel Simons
    Hywel Simons
    Hywel Simons , is a Welsh actor.Born in Neath, he was brought up in Porthcawl. He started acting while a pupil at Porthcawl Comprehensive School, before he went on to study at LAMDA....

     as Dr. Lawes
  • David Troughton
    David Troughton
    David Troughton is an English actor, best known for his Shakespearean roles on the British stage.- Biography :David Troughton was born in Hampstead, North London. He comes from a theatrical family: he is the son of Doctor Who actor Patrick Troughton, elder brother of Michael Troughton, and father...

     as Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick , British urologist, early adopter of cystoscopic and x-ray technologies. It was largely through the efforts of Fenwick that urology was shaped into a specialty in Great Britain, recognized by the Royal Society of Medicine....

  • Katie Ventress as Nurse Mary Green
  • Jason Watkins as Ernest Wilson
  • Lyall B. Watson as Hard Up
  • Antonia Willans as Polly
  • Mike Lockley as Doctor
  • Adam Sarath as Patient
  • Jasmine Lundon as Singing Patient
  • Joshua Lundon as Singing Patient

Casualty 1907

  • Alfie Allen
    Alfie Owen-Allen
    Alfie Evan Allen is an English actor. Allen recently changed his name to incorporate Owen. All of his acting roles are credited as Alfie Allen.-Personal life:...

     as Nobby Clark
  • Leah Bracknell
    Leah Bracknell
    Leah Bracknell is an English actress, best known for her role as Zoe Tate in the long-running soap opera, Emmerdale.-Career:...

     as Mrs Turner
  • Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell is an English stage, film and television actor. His early screen career included the role of Aubrey Montague in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire. In 1983, he starred as Edmund Bertram in a television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel, Mansfield Park...

     as Sydney Holland
    Sydney Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford
    Sydney George Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford was a British barrister and peer.-Biography:Knutsford was the eldest twin son of the Conservative politician Henry Thurstan Holland, 1st Viscount Knutsford, and his wife Elizabeth Margaret Hibbert. His grandfather was the physician and travel writer...

  • Neil Fitzmaurice
    Neil Fitzmaurice
    Neil Fitzmaurice is an English actor, comedian and writer.-Writing:Fitzmaurice's writing projects include That Peter Kay Thing, for which he received a British Comedy Award, and the critically acclaimed Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights, in which he also appeared as "Ray-Von".Neil has also written two...

     as Thomas Hooley
  • William Houston
    Will Houston
    Will Houston , often credited as William Houston, is a British actor. Born in Sussex, he grew up in Northern Ireland....

     as Dr. Millais Culpin
  • Dominic Jephcott
    Dominic Jephcott
    Dominic Jephcott is a RADA-trained British actor.He has played in several roles, including Sir Andrew Ffoulkes in The Scarlet Pimpernel, Mount in Good and Bad at Games, Reggie in The Jewel in the Crown, Det. Sgt. Hobson BA in The Beiderbecke Affair Dominic Jephcott (born 28 July 1957) is a...

     as Bedford Fenwick
  • Lilli Ella Kelleher as Dora
  • Lydia Leonard
    Lydia Leonard
    Lydia Leonard is a British actress.She was born in Paris to an Irish mother, a teacher, and Anglo-French father, a financial accountant; she lived in France until the age of five....

     as Laura Goodley
  • Mike Lockley as Doctor
  • Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie M. Lunghi is an English film, television and theatre actress. She is probably best known for her role as Guinevere in the 1981 film Excalibur, as football manageress Gabriella Benson in the 1990s television series The Manageress and for starring in a series of adverts for Kenco coffee. She...

     as Matron
    Matron
    Matron is the job title of a very senior nurse in several countries, including the United Kingdom, its former colonies, including the Republic of Ireland, although the title Clinical Nurse Manager has become acceptable as an alternative.-History:...

     Eva Luckes
    Eva Luckes
    Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was Matron of The London Hospital from 1880 to 1919.-Early life:Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was born in Exeter, Devon on 8 July 1854 into an upper middle class family. Her father, Henry Richard Luckes, was a banker who had established a comfortable home for his family...

  • Jessica Mullins as Maud
  • Youkti Patel as Corisande Veveers
  • Tom Riley as Dr. James Walton
  • Lewis Robinson
    Lewis Robinson
    Lewis Robinson is an American author. His first book, Officer Friendly and Other Stories, was published by HarperCollins in 2003. A graduate of Middlebury College and the Iowa Writer's Workshop, Robinson currently lives in Andover, Massachusetts as the writer-in-residence of Phillips Academy.-Life...

     as Reggie
  • Hywel Simons
    Hywel Simons
    Hywel Simons , is a Welsh actor.Born in Neath, he was brought up in Porthcawl. He started acting while a pupil at Porthcawl Comprehensive School, before he went on to study at LAMDA....

     as Dr Lawes
  • Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart is an English actress.Smart was born in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Her career started as a child, notably in the television series Woof!. She is best known for a series of well-regarded television roles including Virginia Braithwaite, daughter of a lottery winning family in...

     as Ada Russell
  • Adam Sopp
    Adam Sopp
    Adam Michael Richard Sopp is a British actor, best known for his role as teenager Darren Clarke in the long-running BBC school drama, Grange Hill, from 1999 to 2002. He has also appeared in daytime soap Doctors...

     as Frank Gorman
  • David Troughton
    David Troughton
    David Troughton is an English actor, best known for his Shakespearean roles on the British stage.- Biography :David Troughton was born in Hampstead, North London. He comes from a theatrical family: he is the son of Doctor Who actor Patrick Troughton, elder brother of Michael Troughton, and father...

     as Mr Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick , British urologist, early adopter of cystoscopic and x-ray technologies. It was largely through the efforts of Fenwick that urology was shaped into a specialty in Great Britain, recognized by the Royal Society of Medicine....

  • Charity Wakefield
    Charity Wakefield
    -Background:Wakefield was born in Sussex, England in September 1980. At a couple of months old she moved with her mother, Caroline, to L'Ampolla in Catalonia, Spain. They returned to England when Wakefield was four. She has a half-sister, Olivia...

     as Ethel Bennet

Main characters

  • Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie Lunghi
    Cherie M. Lunghi is an English film, television and theatre actress. She is probably best known for her role as Guinevere in the 1981 film Excalibur, as football manageress Gabriella Benson in the 1990s television series The Manageress and for starring in a series of adverts for Kenco coffee. She...

     as Matron Eva Luckes
    Eva Luckes
    Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was Matron of The London Hospital from 1880 to 1919.-Early life:Eva Charlotte Ellis Luckes was born in Exeter, Devon on 8 July 1854 into an upper middle class family. Her father, Henry Richard Luckes, was a banker who had established a comfortable home for his family...

  • Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart
    Sarah Smart is an English actress.Smart was born in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. Her career started as a child, notably in the television series Woof!. She is best known for a series of well-regarded television roles including Virginia Braithwaite, daughter of a lottery winning family in...

     as Sister Ada Russell
  • Will Houston
    Will Houston
    Will Houston , often credited as William Houston, is a British actor. Born in Sussex, he grew up in Northern Ireland....

     as Dr Millais Culpin
  • Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell is an English stage, film and television actor. His early screen career included the role of Aubrey Montague in the 1981 film Chariots of Fire. In 1983, he starred as Edmund Bertram in a television adaptation of the Jane Austen novel, Mansfield Park...

     as Chairman Sydney Holland
    Sydney Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford
    Sydney George Holland, 2nd Viscount Knutsford was a British barrister and peer.-Biography:Knutsford was the eldest twin son of the Conservative politician Henry Thurstan Holland, 1st Viscount Knutsford, and his wife Elizabeth Margaret Hibbert. His grandfather was the physician and travel writer...

  • Charity Wakefield
    Charity Wakefield
    -Background:Wakefield was born in Sussex, England in September 1980. At a couple of months old she moved with her mother, Caroline, to L'Ampolla in Catalonia, Spain. They returned to England when Wakefield was four. She has a half-sister, Olivia...

     as Nurse Ethel Bennet
  • David Troughton
    David Troughton
    David Troughton is an English actor, best known for his Shakespearean roles on the British stage.- Biography :David Troughton was born in Hampstead, North London. He comes from a theatrical family: he is the son of Doctor Who actor Patrick Troughton, elder brother of Michael Troughton, and father...

     as Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick
    Edwin Hurry Fenwick , British urologist, early adopter of cystoscopic and x-ray technologies. It was largely through the efforts of Fenwick that urology was shaped into a specialty in Great Britain, recognized by the Royal Society of Medicine....

  • Paul Hilton
    Paul Hilton (actor)
    Paul Hilton , is a British actor on stage and TV.He has appeared in TV programmes including The Bill, Silent Witness, Wire in the Blood and Robin Hood, and has had regular character roles in True Dare Kiss and Casualty 1909 .Hilton also appeared in the film Klimt, which starred John...

     as Henry Percy Dean
  • Lydia Leonard
    Lydia Leonard
    Lydia Leonard is a British actress.She was born in Paris to an Irish mother, a teacher, and Anglo-French father, a financial accountant; she lived in France until the age of five....

     as Nurse Laura Goodley
  • Tom Hughes
    Thomas Hughes (disambiguation)
    Thomas Hughes was an English lawyer, politician and author.Thomas Hughes may also refer to:* Thomas Hughes , Australian state Labor MP in Western Australia...

     as Dr Harry Ingrams
  • Anton Lesser
    Anton Lesser
    Anton Lesser is a British actor. He attended Moseley Grammar School and the University of Liverpool before going to RADA in 1977 where he was awarded the Bancroft Gold Medal as the most promising actor of his year....

     as Dr Henry Head
    Henry Head
    Sir Henry Head, FRS was an English neurologist who conducted pioneering work into the somatosensory system and sensory nerves. Much of this work was conducted on himself, in collaboration with the psychiatrist W. H. R. Rivers, by severing and reconnecting sensory nerves and mapping how sensation...

  • Tessa Parr as Nellie Bowers
  • Andrew Readman as Ernest Morris
  • Jo Hartley as Anna
  • Rebecca Johnson as Sister Spencer
  • Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle
    Aidan McArdle is an Irish actor.McArdle was born in Dublin. He studied for an Arts degree at University College Dublin before going on to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, England....

     as Saul Landau
  • Imogen Bain as Mrs Anderson
  • Eleanor Bron
    Eleanor Bron
    Eleanor Bron is an English stage, film and television actress and author.-Early life and family:Bron was born in 1938 in Stanmore, Middlesex, to a Jewish family of Eastern European origin...

     as Miss De Burgh

Supporting characters

  • Kenneth Colley
    Kenneth Colley
    Kenneth Colley is an English actor. A long-time character actor, he came to wider prominence through his role as Admiral Piett in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back and Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi....

     as Frederick Smith
  • Dorothy Atkinson as Nurse Granger
  • Eamon Geoghegan as Hospital Steward
  • Aimee-Ffion Edwards
    Aimee-Ffion Edwards
    Aimee-Ffion Edwards born 1987, is a Welsh actress from Newport, South Wales. She is best known for appearing in the television series Skins as a character called "Sketch", who is introduced at the beginning of series 2 as the stalker of Maxxie Oliver....

     as Deborah Lynch
  • Kate Fleetwood
    Kate Fleetwood
    Kate Fleetwood is an English actress. She was nominated for a Tony Award for her performance in Chichester Festival Theatre's Macbeth which transferred to the West End and Broadway....

     as Grace Barnes
  • Clare Higgins as Mrs Ramsbury
  • Amy Stratton as Mrs Tabard
  • Jon Lolis
    Jon Lolis
    Jon Lolis is an Albanian/Greek actor who is most noted for his role of Aleksander Malota in British Channel 4 soap Hollyoaks. He played the estranged husband of Jacqui McQueen who fell in love with her younger sister Carmel....

     as Stepanovs
  • John Davies
    John Davies
    -Politicians:*John Davies , British businessman and Conservative MP and cabinet minister*John S. Davies , Pennsylvania politician...

     as Uncle Mick
  • Grace Cassidy
    Grace Cassidy
    -Career:Cassidy's most notable role so far is that of Rachel Towers in BBC children's drama Grange Hill, but she has had a number of smaller roles in some of the biggest television series of the past few years, including The Street, The Chase and Marian, Again...

     as Teenage Girl
  • David de Keyser
    David de Keyser
    David de Keyser is a British actor. He is the father of Alexei de Keyser, Pia de Keyser and Thomas de Keyser.In the mid-sixties de Keyser worked twice with the writer, actor and director Jane Arden. Their first collaboration, The Logic Game, was the first BBC drama to be shot on film; it was...

     as Mr Fischoff
  • Caroline Harding as Edith Dean
  • Lisa Brookes as Nurse Ansett
  • Jennie Stoller as Mrs Gold
  • Tim Woodward
    Tim Woodward
    -Biography:Woodward was born in London, England, the son of actors Edward Woodward and Venetia Mary Barrett.He is probably best known for his roles in the 1970s BBC drama Wings, the 1990s ITV soap opera Families and the 2000s ITV police drama Murder City...

    as DSI Hatton
  • Christopher Wright as Mr Knopf
  • Colin Tierney as Prescott
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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