The joy I felt as this heart-breaking episode came to its conclusion, stems from seeing Liz shine. Her performance will take her into the realm of the actors who can hold your fascination like it’s in a vice. She captures the unspoken fears of most disabled people and becomes the true hero of the piece. I’ve watched Liz grow as an actor with each series of Silent Witness, but in ‘One Day’ Liz’s talent soars. The two new actors, Toby Sams-Freidman and Rosie Jones, highlight that there is new disabled acting talent out there ready to set the screen alight, but the true accolades must go to Liz. Liz Carr shines in the special episode ‘One Day’ © BBC – Photographer Sally Mais I saw the thrill packed, tear jerking two-hour programme at a BAFTA screening this week and as the credits rolled I knew I witnessed the glass ceiling for disabled talent finally being broken. Obviously, I can’t say too much as I would hate to ruin a show that will hold a place in the history of television as a sea change in the portrayal of disabled people, but I must say don’t miss it. On Monday 29th and Tuesday 30th January 2018 the double episode ‘One Day’ revolves around two disabled characters and places Liz’s acting skills front and centre. Now, as series 21 is drawing to its end, the show takes Clarissa and the programme’s commitment to inclusion a leap further. Sharply dressed, acutely intelligent, funny and married – Clarissa is the disabled character every disabled person in the UK, perhaps the world, has been waiting to see. Each series, Liz stretched and pushed the barriers of the stereotypes of what a disabled person is. Slowly this fear began to fade, as Clarissa became a vital part of the show’s core team. ![]() In series 16 Clarissa didn’t give Liz much chance to flex her acting muscles and there was a worry – which Liz herself admitted to – that this might be another case of tokenism. Liz plays lab assistant and tech wiz Clarissa Mullery a character with an acerbic wit and a collection of stunning shoes. Finally, a UK crime drama started featuring a disabled character. Great for my bank balance and waistline, but it didn’t exactly mark a step forward in the portrayal of disabled people in TV drama.įast forward to 2013 and series 16 of the show, with a cast now led by Emilia Fox playing Nikki Alexander, David Caves playing Jack Hodgeson and Richard Lintern who plays Thomas Chamberlin, in rolls comedienne and actress Liz Carr. I earned a few quid, had a free lunch and had the excitement of being on a show I loved watching. I was over the moon when, after a drunken night with one of the series directors, I did a cameo as a featured extra in an early episode. I must admit that I have been a fan ever since back then. The BBC programme began back in 1996, following the work of Pathologist Sam Ryan, played by Amanda Burton, as she battled to solve crime and manage her complex love life. Another show that has achieved this status is the crime pathology drama series Silent Witness. The soaps are perfect examples, shows that have burrowed into the public psyche so deeply that it’s hard to imagine there was ever a time when they weren’t on our screens. In the other half there are old stalwarts. It’s all “ohs” and “arhs” before it’s all forgotten. In the first there are programs that come and go, grabbing public attention like a firework. Clarissa Mullery – (C) BBC – Photographer: Joel AndersonTelevision is, to use an old football adage, a game of two halves.
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