Doc Martin: Going Bodmin


8:00 pm - 9:00 pm, Friday, January 9 on ITV3 (10)

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About this Broadcast

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Going Bodmin
Season 1, Episode 1

First episode of the comedy drama series starring Martin Clunes as Dr Martin Ellingham, an eminent surgeon forced to retrain as a GP after developing an aversion to blood. Learning a vacancy has arisen in the sleepy Cornish village of Portwenn, Martin promptly applies and gets the job, despite opposition from local schoolteacher Louisa. With Caroline Catz, Stephanie Cole and Celia Imrie


subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Comedy General Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Martin Clunes (Actor) .. Dr Martin Ellingham
Caroline Catz (Actor) .. Louisa Glasson
Stewart Wright (Actor) .. PC Mark Mylow
Ian McNeice (Actor) .. Bert Large
Joe Absolom (Actor) .. Al Large
Stephanie Cole (Actor) .. Joan Norton
Lucy Punch (Actor) .. Elaine Denham
Felicity Montagu (Actor) .. Caroline
Celia Imrie (Actor) .. Lady Susan Brading
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. Sir Gilbert Spencer
Jeff Rawle (Actor) .. Roger Fenn
Finlay Robertson (Actor) .. Ross
Ben Bolt (Director)
Mark Crowdy (Executive producer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Martin Clunes (Actor) .. Dr Martin Ellingham
Born: November 28, 1961 in London
Best Known For: A string of TV hits, including Men Behaving Badly and Doc Martin.
Early-life: Born Alexander Martin Clunes on November 28, 1961, in Wimbledon, south London, into a theatrical family. His father was the acclaimed classical actor Alec Clunes, who died of lung cancer in 1970. His mother used to work as Orson Welles's secretary, and his cousin was Sherlock Holmes star Jeremy Brett. Clunes left school at 16 with one O-level and wanted to be a carpenter before enrolling at the Arts Educational Drama College in London. He started out in theatre and won acclaim for directing The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner.
Career: Clunes made his TV debut in a 1983 Doctor Who adventure, followed by a regular role in sitcom No Place Like Home. In 1990 he appeared alongside Sean Connery in The Russia House and two years later in the much-maligned comedy Carry On Columbus. He turned to directing again with comedy film Staggered, in which he also starred. Men Behaving Badly made him a household name - but not until original co-star Harry Enfield was replaced by Neil Morrissey and the series moved from ITV to the BBC. He has chalked up a major success for ITV as über-grumpy GP Doc Martin. Clunes has also presented several documentaries, and appeared in such series as William and Mary, A is for Acid, The Town and Reggie Perrin.
Quote: "I get contemptuous of my own acting and wish I had fewer chins."
Trivia: He won a British Comedy Award and BAFTA award for his performance on Men Behaving Badly.
Caroline Catz (Actor) .. Louisa Glasson
Stewart Wright (Actor) .. PC Mark Mylow
Ian McNeice (Actor) .. Bert Large
Born: October 02, 1950 in Basingstoke
Best Known For: Doc Martin.
Early-life: McNeice was born in Basingstoke in Hampshire in 1950. His acting training started at the Taunton School in Somerset, followed by two years at the Salisbury Playhouse. His childhood was hard, as the shy youngster struggled with a stammer, and he lost his older brother in a car accident. Determined to overcome his shyness, he stuck at acting and spent years in theatre, including a four-year career with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and a production of Nicholas Nickleby on Broadway.
Career: McNeice's TV breakthrough was in the drama series Edge of Darkness. He has also appeared in a number of films, including 84 Charing Cross Road, Day of the Dead, No Escape, From Hell and The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain. His breakthrough into American films occurred when he played opposite Jim Carrey as Fulton Greenwall in Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls (1995). Other notable credits include Conspiracy (2001), Valkyrie (2009) and the HBO hit series Rome. Since 2004, he has played Bert Large in Doc Martin.
Quote: "In a funny kind of way, the problems that my weight and stammer created were also the foundations of my career as an entertainer."
Trivia: McNeice has played Winston Churchill in a number of projects, including Doctor Who and the stage version of The King's Speech.
Joe Absolom (Actor) .. Al Large
Born: December 16, 1978 in London
Best Known For: Playing Matthew Rose in EastEnders, and Al in Doc Martin.
Early-life: Born December 16, 1978, in London. He has an older brother, Dan, and younger sister, Cassie. After appearing in a school play as a runner bean at the age of 10, he took up acting professionally. His father sent photos of his three children to an agency just for fun, but Joe became hooked on treading the boards. His first TV appearance came in an advert for peanut butter. More commercials followed.
Career: Absolom made his drama debut in 1991's Antonia and Jane, and hasn't looked back since. He worked consistently throughout his teens - by the time he was 18, he had appeared on TV in the likes of The Bill, Silent Witness and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. Touching Evil and Dangerfield followed, but he didn't become a famous face until he starred in EastEnders. He left in 2000 after three years in the soap. Since then he's starred in Extreme Ops, Stan the Man, Unconditional Love, Servants and PoW. He also has a regular role in ITV's comedy drama Doc Martin and featured alongside Kevin Costner and fellow ex-Walford resident Michael Greco in the Western series Hatfields and McCoys.
Quote: "Acting's not a career I contemplated. I thought I'd go to university and spend three years drunk, then try to start to live properly."
Trivia: In 2010, Absolom won a celebrity version of Total Wipeout, winning £10,000 for charity.
Stephanie Cole (Actor) .. Joan Norton
Born: October 05, 1941 in Solihull
Best Known For: Tenko, Waiting for God and Doc Martin.
Early-life: Patricia Stephanie Cole was born in Solihull on October 5, 1941. She landed a place at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre school when she was 15 and made her stage debut at the age of 17, playing a 90-year-old woman in Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit (at the age of 63, she played the same role when the play was revived at the Savoy Theatre in 2004).
Career: Cole made her TV debut in an episode of Z Cars in 1968. She went on to make guest appearances in several TV shows but her big break didn't come until she was cast as Dr Beatrice Mason in Tenko in 1981. She played the kindly doctor for three series and a one-off special. Other notable roles include Mrs Featherstone in Open All Hours, Betty Sillitoe in A Bit of a Do, Diana Trent in Waiting for God and Joan Norton in Doc Martin. More recently, she played Sylvia Goodwin in Coronation Street and revived the role of Mrs Featherstone in Still Open All Hours.
Quote: "I laugh like a drain at most jokes, but then instantly forget them."
Trivia: In 2012, Cole won a British Soap Award for Best Comedy Performance for her role in Coronation Street. She was awarded an OBE in 2005.
Lucy Punch (Actor) .. Elaine Denham
Felicity Montagu (Actor) .. Caroline
Celia Imrie (Actor) .. Lady Susan Brading
Born: July 15, 1952 in Guildford, Surrey
Best Known For: Her association with Victoria Wood.
Early-life: Born Celia Diana Savile Imrie in Guildford, Surrey, on July 15, 1952. Her father, David, a radiographer from Glasgow, didn't live to see his daughter's success, although she believes he would have been very proud. Her Scottish blood has come in handy in playing numerous Celts on the big and small screen, although her original dream was to be a dancer. Unfortunately, a growth spurt in her teens meant she became too tall for ballet. She worked as a cleaner before landing starring roles.
Career: Imrie's first professional jobs in showbusiness were in the chorus of various pantomimes. Her film and TV debuts came in 1974 in House of Whipcord and Upstairs, Downstairs. She continued to gain small roles in various productions, but her big break occurred when Victoria Wood offered her roles in As Seen on TV in 1985. Since then, she's continued to occasionally work with Wood and won a prestigious Olivier Award in 2006 for her role in Acorn Antiques: The Musical. Her other credits include Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, Highlander, Gormenghast, Bridget Jones' Diary, Star Wars: Episode One, Doctor Zhivago, Frankenstein, Calendar Girls, Nanny McPhee and St Trinian's (and its sequel). On TV she has also appeared in Kingdom, After You've Gone, Cranford, and the acclaimed one-off drama The Road to Coronation Street.
Quote: On stripping off for Calendar Girls: "I am very happy now that at my time of life I have learned to laugh at my bosom. In years gone by I could never have done all this."
Trivia: In 2013, Imrie received an honorary doctorate by the University of Winchester.
Richard Johnson (Actor) .. Sir Gilbert Spencer
Jeff Rawle (Actor) .. Roger Fenn
Finlay Robertson (Actor) .. Ross
Dominic Minghella (Writer)
Philippa Braithwaite (Producer)
Ben Bolt (Director)
Mark Crowdy (Executive producer)

Before / After

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Heartbeat
6:55 pm
Doc Martin
9:00 pm