logo
Natalie Cassidy Learning to Care (w/t) commissioned for BBC One and BBC iPlayer

Natalie Cassidy Learning to Care (w/t) commissioned for BBC One and BBC iPlayer

BBC News30-04-2025
BBC Daytime has commissioned Natalie Cassidy Learning to Care (w/t) a 12x30 series for BBC One and iPlayer, with support from BBC Northern Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen.
Best known for playing Sonia Fowler on EastEnders, Natalie Cassidy will be taking on a new role – but off-screen, fulfilling her genuine ambition of a lifetime to train as a carer. She will study, work and care alongside the next generation of young carers.
Natalie will be enrolling at one of the UK's top Health & Social Care colleges where she'll train, study, and work alongside real professionals - facing the realities, the heartbreak, and the joy of caring. Together, her and her fellow students will push open the door to the UK's healthcare providers and put the spotlight on something we all face at some point in our lives - who will care for our parents, who will care for our children... and who will care for us?
Will Natalie and her classmates have what it takes to be the next generation of healthcare heroes?
Having cared for her family members in recent years, and volunteering at local groups, she is now taking on this new and emotional challenge. With no holds barred access, this series will follow Natalie from classroom to community care services, supporting those with a range of care needs, she'll be there for life's toughest moments. And to make it official, she'll have to pass her final exam.
Each episode will reflect what every day looks like for a carer, with no day quite the same. Across the UK, millions of ordinary people quietly take on extraordinary responsibilities, caring for elderly parents, partners with long-term conditions, or children with additional needs, often without recognition or support. This series will shine a light on their daily realities too, championing the unseen and unsung carers who hold families and communities together.
Introducing a spectrum of care stories and carers in all types of careers and the families they care for, the episodes will follow how care is implemented with guidance from medical and care professionals in the field. Will it be an eye opener, or all in a day's work for Natalie?
The series starts filming in April and will follow Natalie throughout her year of qualifying, through exams, placements, work and home life.
Natalie comments; 'I'm thrilled to be embarking on a new adventure with BBC Daytime. In a series exploring social care, I will be going back to college and learning for the first time since leaving school at 16. Caring has always been a huge part of my life, from watching my mum care for my nan, to being a mother to caring for my dad, this series is close to my heart and I can't wait for you to see it.'
Muslim Alim, Commissioning Editor for BBC Daytime comments. "We are thrilled to be working with Natalie Cassidy on this exciting new series. Audiences know and love Natalie for her humour, honesty and heart — and now they'll see her in a whole new light as she throws herself into the world of care, not as a celebrity, but as a student carer learning from the ground up. Natalie's personal experiences have given her a deep, authentic connection to care, and through her journey, we hope to celebrate the unsung individuals who dedicate their lives to helping others."
Jane Kelly, Executive Producer for Big Mountain comments, 'We are excited to be working with Natalie Cassidy on this impactful series for BBC Daytime, BBCNI and Northern Ireland Screen. The show builds on our proven track record in multi-layered contributor-focused factual. It has been over a year in development and we couldn't be more proud to bring together a unique offscreen team with lived experience of the care sector as well as brilliant editorial and creative expertise. We can't wait to bring you Natalie's journey and stories, communities and characters not often seen on TV.'
Natalie Cassidy Learning to Care (w/t) has been commissioned for BBC One and iPlayer by Rob Unsworth, Head of BBC Daytime and Early Peak Commissioning, with support from BBC Northern Ireland and Northern Ireland Screen. The Commissioning Editor for BBC Daytime is Muslim Alim and Karen Kirby is Commissioning Executive for BBC Northern Ireland. The series is produced by Big Mountain Productions. Jane Kelly is the Executive Producer, Paula Campion is the Consultant Executive Producer, Ally Thompson is the Senior Producer and Emma Jones is the Series Shooting Director.
HD3
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

YouTube star and EastEnders actress among first batch of Strictly contestants
YouTube star and EastEnders actress among first batch of Strictly contestants

Leader Live

time34 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

YouTube star and EastEnders actress among first batch of Strictly contestants

The popular BBC dancing show, hosted by Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly, will return to TV screens in September with a new host of famous faces competing each week to win the glitterball trophy. Podcast host and YouTube star George Clarke was announced as the sixth celebrity contestant on Tuesday during BBC Radio 1's Going Home drivetime show. Clarke, also known as George Clarkey, said: 'Never thought I'd say this … but I'm doing Strictly! Honestly, I've got no idea what I'm doing but I'm excited to get stuck in … and potentially fall over a fair bit.' It comes after EastEnders actress Balvinder Sopal was revealed as a contestant during a segment filmed live from Albert Square on ITV's Good Morning Britain (GMB). She said that 'being on Strictly is a dream that I held on to, with no proof that it would ever happen'. The other stars confirmed to be competing are Love Island winner Dani Dyer, Gladiators star Harry Aikines-Aryeetey, Doctor Who actress Alex Kingston and former footballer Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink. Speaking on The One Show after her reveal, Dyer, who is the daughter of actor Danny Dyer, said: 'It's such a fun magical show – to be asked to do it is such an honour. 'I just can't wait to be able to wear (the costumes) – it's going to be so much fun.' A post shared by BBC Strictly (@bbcstrictly) Former Chelsea footballer Hasselbaink said: 'I'm a father of only girls and Strictly is a part of our home life – I like the show. Let's have a go.' Actress Kingston, who interrupted her holiday in Italy to speak to hosts Alex Scott and Roman Kemp, joked: 'I was super excited but now I'm terrified.' Aikines-Aryeetey, known as Nitro on the rebooted Gladiators, previously competed in last year's Strictly Christmas Special and described his decision to return on Monday as 'so nice I just had to do it twice'. In July, the BBC announced that two 'incredible' new professional dancers, US-born Alexis Warr and Australian dancer Julian Caillon, would be joining the show. Daly and Winkleman will return as presenters with Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Anton Du Beke and Shirley Ballas on the judges' table. Strictly will return to BBC One and BBC iPlayer this September.

Michelle Collins: ‘The death of my school friend changed my life'
Michelle Collins: ‘The death of my school friend changed my life'

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

Michelle Collins: ‘The death of my school friend changed my life'

Michelle Collins, who's in Edinburgh with her Fringe show, Motorhome Marilyn, is best known for playing Cindy Beale in EastEnders. It's a dark comedy about a woman called Denise who went to America to seek fame and fortune and ends up as a Marilyn impersonator. She is an obsessive Marilyn fan and also lives in a motorhome, hence the title. She has a very lonely existence in Las Vegas, living with her pet python, and has been Marilyn for so long she is not quite sure who Denise is any more. Port Logan, where I spent three summers filming Two Thousand Acres of Sky (even though the series was set on a fictional island off Skye). It was probably the most enjoyable filming I've ever done. Port Logan is a tiny village next to Portpatrick with, I think, a population then of only about 20 people. Just beautiful. In the height of summer I remember it not getting dark until so late, and sometimes you could see the northern lights. I love the beautiful, rugged landscape of Scotland; I feel a real affinity with the country. I also filmed Sea of Souls with Bill Paterson right up in northern Scotland, near Durness. It was a really hot summer and there were caves right on the beach. When the weather is good, Scotland is the best place in the world. The beaches were so beautiful and it was quite spooky because it was about a psychic criminologist and that part of Scotland in the north is quite spooky — I even stayed in a haunted hotel and saw a ghost. Mother India's café in Edinburgh, an amazing Indian tapas restaurant near the Gilded Balloon, where I am performing this year. There were also some fantastic fish restaurants in Portpatrick: I remember getting my first deep-fried Mars bar there. I'm partial to vegetarian haggis. • The 15 best restaurants in Edinburgh — our critic's guide Intense, kind, scatty. Charlie George. I used to have big posters of the Arsenal football team, especially when they did the double in the early Seventies. I still support them now. The train up to Glasgow, then driving down along the coastline to Stranraer and on to Portpatrick and Port Logan. That I was in Baywatch. I had dinner with someone once and they asked me if I still had that red swimming costume. Apparently, Wikipedia says I was in it. I wasn't. Never send an email on a Monday morning. Always sit on it. • Paul Sinha: I dodged an early death. It changes your perspective My great-grandma, Granny Bowen. My sister and I lived with her and my grandad for about a year when we were children, when I was about 11. I didn't like living out in Hayes, Middlesex — it felt like the back of beyond. I used to do everything I could to wind them up. She used to call me a little minx. David Essex, David Cassidy, David Bowie — all the Davids. I'm not sure if this is just my mind playing tricks with me, but I remember being in a huge pram (a big perambulator — I was a Sixties baby). Apparently, I threw eggs out of it and someone went into the butcher's shop where I was parked outside, and said to my mum: 'Your little baby boy is throwing eggs outside.' My mum didn't care about the eggs but she told them: 'That's not a boy, that's a girl!' I was in a TV show called The Illustrated Mum, which was adapted from a Jacqueline Wilson book. My agent didn't really want me to do it, but I wanted to because I loved the book. I loved playing the character, Marigold. It did really well — it won Baftas and an International Emmy. And I had a very memorable experience going to New York with Jacqueline Wilson. I was presented with the Emmy by Lenny Kravitz. • Miriam Margolyes: 'They call me vile. I'm absolutely delightful' I have very fond memories of going to see Oliver! with my mum when I was a kid. We saw it loads of times and every time I see it on TV now I feel an overwhelming sense of warmth and nostalgia. It still makes me cry. Also, The Sound of Music. Meeting a girl called Kate Healy. I was about 14, she was 15. We had very, very different lives; she had much more of a privileged life than I did. I would say she was more middle class, I was working class from a single-parent family. Sadly, Kate died when she was 16 — I was devastated. She had a cousin who was an actress who then helped me to audition for drama school. In many ways Kate really changed my life. Michelle Collins is performing in Motorhome Marilyn at Gilded Balloon Patter House until Aug 25 (not 13),

Great British Sewing Bee star flooded with support after breaking down in tears
Great British Sewing Bee star flooded with support after breaking down in tears

Daily Mirror

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Great British Sewing Bee star flooded with support after breaking down in tears

The Great British Sewing Bee contestant was in tears after his design was praised, as it shared a link to his late mother A Great British Sewing Bee contestant broke down in tears after judges hailed his "beautiful" creation, which carried a poignant connection to his late mum. ‌ Judges Patrick Grant and Esme Young set the sewers a challenge this week to craft garments using reused and recycled materials, with many contestants bringing along old family clothing. ‌ Durham-based stitcher Dan, who started sewing aged just 10, gathered a collection of matching Christmas t-shirts his family had worn in 2022. ‌ His plan was to transform them into a single halter-neck dress, complete with a faux-fur muff. Discussing the accessory, he revealed: "This was a shawl that I made for my mum that she only wore once, unfortunately she passed away," reports Wales Online. ‌ "So I thought it'd be really nice to have her touch." When his finished creation was unveiled, Dan's garment was described as "beautiful" and he even claimed Garment of the Week honours. "I'm glad I did this, because I wanted my mum to be represented," he wept. ‌ He later reflected: "This week has been insane, I can't believe all the good comments they said. "It was really nice they got my vision and knew where I was going with it, especially this one in particular, it was really personal to me." ‌ Patrick also lauded Dan's finished piece, declaring: "It's absolutely stunning and such a beautiful story behind it. "The perfect way to go from an unwanted pile of old pyjamas into this beautiful, beautiful outfit." Following his victory, Dan said: "I've just got to trust my instincts and go with it. I'm glad that I did it on this week, where it was something so personal." ‌ Viewers were moved by the story behind his design, with one commenting: "Dan that dress was absolutely amazing mate. Thoroughly deserved garment of the week." Another viewer expressed: "Really pleased for Dan," while another added: "Definitely want to give Dan a huge cuddle." "Dan smashed it this week!" a fourth fan praised, while another admirer commented: "Well done Dan, that looked really good." The Great British Sewing Bee airs Tuesdays at 9pm on BBC One and iPlayer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store