How nearly dying inspired wife to create Call The Midwife
She is the writer behind Call The Midwife, one of the most beloved TV series of modern times.Â
He is part of the McGann acting dynasty. When they met, there was a magnetic attraction which has never waned.Â
But as Stephen McGann (who plays Call The Midwifeâs Dr Patrick Turner) reveals in this first extract from his moving memoir, serialised in the Mail next week, they were tested to the extreme by an illness that nearly cost Heidi Thomas her life when their son was weeks old.Â
Stephen McGann, left, has revealed in his memoirs that a serious illness that affected his wife Heidi Thomas inspired her to create Call The Midwife
Love at first sight? I didnât believe in it. I found it rather a trite idea â" a self-confirming justification for a love that two people build by endeavour.
But love at first sight is exactly what happened to me when I first met Heidi Thomas. So what do I know?Â
Itâs 1986. Iâm 23. A young actor. Iâm living in a council flat in East London and Iâm auditioning every day.
One morning, I get a call about a play called Shamrocks And Crocodiles. Iâm due to meet the writer and director in Liverpool, so I take the train from Euston and settle down to read the script.
Itâs the story of a family torn apart by the death of a fathe r, and itâs brilliant. Searing, intelligent and thoughtful.Â
I turn to the front of the script to read the name of the author. Heidi Thomas. Iâve never heard of her.
The themes are far too mature and deftly crafted for her to be a young writer, so my guess is sheâs a mature woman â" a mother returning to work after raising children, or a wizened academic on a second career.
Iâm met at the theatre stage door by the director and taken into a small room. As I enter, Heidi Thomas rises to greet me.
Iâm speechless. Sheâs young â" early 20s like me, but with a complexion and elfin figure that makes her look like a teenager.Â
Sheâs a Liverpool native, yet sounds like the head-girl of an Edwardian convent school. This woman â" this girl â" wrote that beautiful, brutal, black-humoured script?
We discuss the play. Heidi starts to speak, her high-toned staccato sprinkling the room like birdsong.Â
I see her qualities right away â" and my heart is soon banging so loudly in my ribs that I fear sheâll hear it.
I have to get that job. I have to see her again. Has she felt it, too?
She has. When I leave the theatre, she races out into the nearby city square to find me. In her head â" she told me later â" a single word repeated itself over and over: âFound. Found. Found.â
Heidi, pictured with their son Dominic after giving birth in 1996, was struck down with a gangrenous small intestine which nearly killed her
Stephen, who plays Dr Patrick Turner on Call The Midwife, left with Laura Main as Sister Shelagh, said his wife's ordeal was a 'waking nightmare'
I got the job; and in the following weeks, Heidi and I fell irredeemably in love. Weâd stay in the rehearsal room during lunch breaks and weâd talk and talk.
We knew that we loved each other, but we both had partners.
What we had was something else, something requiring a different kind of bonding.
The play was a great success. It concluded, and we wrote to each other for a while.Â
Being young and stupid, I convinced myself that the momentous things I felt for her must be a recurring feature of life. We lost touch.
Two years went by. Then, we met again. I was filming a comedy series in Liverpool and whe n I walked into a bar one evening, she was sitting there. My heart thumped in my chest.
We exchanged pleasantries. She told me she was soon to fly to the Soviet Union on a journalistic assignment. She looked lovely. She was also newly single.Â
My heart was banging against my ribs like a Victorian schoolmaster thwacking a ruler on a slow boyâs head.Â
Tell her, you fool! Tell her how you feel! Say something! This is important.
What did I do? I started an argument. A silly, petty argument about nothing. My only excuse is that the romantic tension was so intense it required an outlet.
I watched her eyes brim with tears as we bickered, and I could feel the headmasterâs ruler thwacking me harder. I was screaming at myself to stop, but couldnât.
We parted frostily, and I returned to my h otel room, shell-shocked. I closed the door.Â
At that precise moment the truth became clear. Heidi was the love of my life. My anchor. Iâd never find anyone else like her. And Iâd just blown it.
Stephen, pictured with Laura Main on Call The Midwife, married Heidi in 1990 and they had their son Dominic six years later
I slept fitfully, and rose early to work. When I came back to my hotel the following evening, there was a book of love poetry by Brian Patten pushed under my door, and a card inserted at this poem:
Doubt shall not make an end of you
nor closing eyes lose your shape
when the retinaâs light fades;
what dawns inside me will light you.
My heart stopped. Enough was enough. I needed to find this woman and ask her to be my wife. And this time I needed to be something other than a complete idiot.
Sheâd left her number on the card, so I rang her motherâs house in Liverpool straight away.
âCan I speak to Heidi please?â
âSheâs gone to the USSR.â
âAlready? Have you got a number for her?â
âSheâs in Siberia. Behind the Iron Curtain. Itâs not like ringing the council.â
Heidi returned several weeks later â" and within two years we were married. It was 1990, we were both 27, and we abandoned city living for rural Essex.
Heidi was now a TV scriptwriter â" well-paid work that helped smooth the all-or-nothing nature of my acting career. We wanted children, but five years on, the pregnancy hadnât materialised.
It turned out Heidi had an ovarian cyst which had rendered her infertile â" the result of long-term endometriosis [an incurable condition in which tissue normally found in the womb lining develops abnormally elsewhere].
The specialist was hopeful. If the cyst was surgically removed, we might have a short window of opportunity for conception.
We wasted no time. Heidi was admitted to hospital in late October 1995. After her operation, sheâd maybe have six months in which to conceive, said the specialist. The clock was ticking.
That January, Heidi brandished a positive pregnancy test. We tried not to get too excited, but we allowed ourselves to imagine the house echoing with new cries.
Sadly, it wasnât to be. After six weeks, the pregnancy terminated naturally. We cried tears for that unformed little vessel of our hopes.Â
Now at least we knew that conception was possible. But the fertility âwindowâ had shrunk to only a couple more months, so we had to be organised and resolute. At that point, our plans went west, in more ways than one.
Heidi, pictured, survived after emergency surgery and said the experience 'stopped her being so afraid'
Stephen, pictured with Laura Main on the show, has been on Call The Midwife since the first series
I landed a job in a touring version of the cowboy musical Calamity Jane, playing Wild Bill Hickok.
We were in no financial position for me to turn it down, so we carefully planned our baby attempts for those weeks when Iâd be playing in the South-East â" close enough to commute from home.
When the curtain came down, Iâd whizz back in my car to continue my nightâs work.Â
Members of the cast, aware of my efforts, encouraged my hurried exit with cries of âBreak a leg!â and âYee hah!â
Once again, we were successful. As the weeks rolled by, things felt better. More secure.Â
Each week was a new milestone, bringing us closer to the time that w e knew the baby would be safe.
On December 29, Heidi went into labour. At the hospital, three hours went by. Then the foetal heart monitor began to show the babyâs heart rate dropping abnormally.Â
I saw the medics exchange concerned professional looks. The baby was becoming stressed.
Time stood still. Then a single adult voice was heard â" professional relief devoid of emotion. âItâs out.â
I caught a blurred glimpse of blue-coloured flesh â" like a little dolphin â" as the staff huddled around the newborn and carried it off to clear its throat of mucus.
Seconds went by. Then at last I heard the baby cry. Not a full cry. More of a slow, bruised groan.
The midwife carried the little groaning thing over to me. I saw its face for the first time.Â
Red and bruised from the forceps, grimacing with pain. A boy. I had a son. Dominic.
Heidi had to be whisked away, so I was surprised to find myself alone in a recovery room with him.Â
I sat really close and lightly stroked his battered face. Every ten seconds or so, heâd make a sad groan.
Sitting there felt . . . strange. That bundle of bruises and fingers looking up at me seemed so unfamiliar. Who was he? Who, now, was I?
Over the next few weeks, Heidi and I got to know our beautiful son. It looked as though Dominic would be our only child.Â
The window of fertility had closed as quickly as it had opened. But we felt blessed.
By the end of February, it was time to buy Dominic his first proper pair of shoes.Â
So one bright Saturday afternoon, we drove to Cambridge and purchased a lovely pair of blue lace-ups.
Afterwards, Heidi and I strolled around the shops with Dom in his buggy, enjoying the perfection of the moment. A family in frozen time. Happiness like the delicate filigree on a dragonflyâs wing.
His memoirs also reveal the difficulty he and Heidi had conceiving and giving birth to their son
Fewer than 72 hours from this perfect moment, Heidi would be close to death. She felt the first stirrings of pain that Saturday.Â
Then she began to retch, over and over. She thought she had eaten something that disagreed with her.
By Sunday, she was moaning with pain. That afternoon, a locum doctor came to the house, examined Heidi, said it was food poisoning and gave her a Valium tablet and two paracetamol.
It was a serious misdiagnosis â" from an overworked locum whoâd drawn hasty conclusions.Â
By Sunday evening, the pains had been replaced by fever and Heidi was vomiting bile. She was drifting in and out of consciousness.
We didnât know it, but the reason the pain had stopped was that her intestine was dying off â" because her small bowel was constricted and turning gangrenous.Â
That, in turn, was killing the nerves that cause pain. But it was also the beginning of sepsis, as gangrene began to infect her blood.
Heidi was slowly starting to die. It was now 24 hours since weâd seen the doctor, yet I still didnât call him again. Why not? Was I a complete idiot?
Maybe. All I can say is that when youâre in such a situation, the wildly unlikely nightmare is hard to imagine and harder to embrace.Â
I had no experience to draw on, and I was still young enough to believe such tragedies are things that happen to other people.
Yet there was another element, too â" something that would prove almost catastrophic.
Heidi is incredibly stoical in the face of illness, something she combines with a very strong dislike of excessive fuss.Â
Though profoundly ill and feverish, she was still insisting that she didnât want to bother the locum again.
She stayed in bed all day. At around midnight, I took a good look at her and noticed her lips had turned blue.
Call The Midwife, pictured, has become one of the most popular programmes on the BBC
But she kept saying: âIâll be fine. I just want to sleep . . .â
Then she went off to be sick again, and came back crawling on her hands and knees.Â
She didnât even have the energy to climb into bed. That was the moment the veil lifted. The moment I finally did something. The moment that probably saved Heidiâs life.
I telephoned the locum. A different one answered. âLook, exactly how ill is she?â he said.Â
I said nothing, but simply held out the receiver towards our nearby bedroom. At that moment, my wife was giving out a chilling scream of pain.
I put the receiver back to my ear. There was a stunned silence on the other end.
âIâll be over right away,â he said.
The doctor came and immediately called an ambulance. âIf youâre lucky, itâs a burst appendix,â he said ominously.
We got to A&E at around one or two in the morning. The registrar was woken from his sleep â" just one hour after his last mammoth shift had ended.
âWe need to open you up to find out whatâs going on,â he said.
At about 4am, as we reached the doors to the operating theatre, the registrar produced the necessary consent form for Heidi to sign. But she had seen something that made her hesitate.
âI donât want a colostomy,â she said.
âHeidi . . .â
âI wonât sign.â She was resolute.
âSometimes itâs the price of life, Iâm afraid,â said the registrar.
âNo. I wonât do it,â said Heidi.
âHow about if I put this . . .â said the registrar. He drew a little symbol on the form. âThis means that we can open you up and . . . proceed as necessary.â
And then it was time. My girl. My life. Iâd first met her through the doors of a theatre. Would I leave her the same way?
I watched her disappear among the scrubs and harsh lights.
Heidi, pictured, has also written for Cranford and Upstairs, Downstairs for the BBC
Some of Stephen and Heidi's real life experiences were reflected in his character and on-screen wife Shelagh's trouble having a baby on Call The Midwife
Go home â" sheâll be out soon, said the senior houseman. âIf itâs longer than a couple of hours, it means . . . something else.â
When the telephone finally rang, it was 11am. Seven hours later.
At the hospital, the senior houseman appeared with the nurse. âLetâs find somewhere where we can talk,â he said. They led me down the corridor to find a room where we could be alone.
The nurse tried the first room, but it was occupied. Then another â" that too was full. We continued along the corridor, the ghastly farce of it stretched out.
Eventually we came to a stockroom that was piled high with cardboard boxes.
The doctor and I perched on the cardboard boxes. There was a pause. I sat â" ears ringing â" waiting for the inevitable, terrible, life-changing words.
âWell . . .â said the doctor. âFirst, I just want to say that your wife is a very, very brave and strong woman. Quite extraordinary.â
âIs.â He said âisâ. Present tense. Hope like frail filigree. âIs she . . . OK?â I whispered.
The doctor looked exhausted. The surgery had been complex, he said. âWhen we opened her up, we discovered that her small bowel had become constricted and was blocked by earlier scar tissue. A large section of it had become gangrenous.â
âBut . . . is she OK?â
The doctor nodded kindly. âSheâs recovering in a special-care ward, but sheâs still extremely ill. She has peritonitis [inflammation of the abdomen walls] and severe septic shock.
âShe was close to death. The operation was a success, but thereâs a real risk of further infection. Sheâs not out of trouble yet.â
He must have seen my eyes brimming. Leaning in, he smiled and said: âSheâs strong, your wife. Stronger than any of us expected.â
âHas she got a colostomy?â I asked. I couldnât give a damn if she did or didnât. I just wanted to tell her first, if necessary.
His smile grew wider. âNo. We managed to avoid it. I expect sheâll be pleased with us for that.â
Heidi looked desperately frail â" pale as death. It was difficult to see her beneath the mass of tubes and machines crowded in and around her body.
She was heavily sedated: sheâd be there with me one moment, and then drift off the next. < /p>
The memory of her look of joy and surprise when she first saw me sitting by her bed still breaks my heart.
In those first days, our son was being cared for by relatives. I sat and watched Heidiâs face for hours and hours. Fragile and brave and beautiful.
I felt a love for her that still astonishes me with its force. She was everything to me â" and I could feel it as a physical thing.
I couldnât live without her. It was no longer a romantic notion, but a material fact. I didnât want to.Â
The cast of Call The Midwife pictured at the TV Choice Awards in 2015
The show has run for six series and has also produced five Christmas specials
One day rolled by. Then another. She held on. On the third day, the nurses took her for a shower.
âThey put me in a wheelchair to take me there, and then they placed me on a plastic chair under the shower head,â Heidi told me.
âI could barely move without assistance. It was two women in their early 20s, and that was the moment I realised what real nursing was about, as opposed to medicine.â
Her eyes filled with tears at the memory.
âThey said: âWeâre going to do this together, Heidi, because itâll make it quicker for you, as you canât be out of bed for long . . .â
âAnd they gently washed me. Just to feel that water on my head and shoulders â" the gent leness with which they did it. It was just incredible.â
That gentle act of care in her darkest time was something Heidi never forgot. Years later, she wrote a hugely successful TV series that had exactly this kind of nursing care at its heart.
If the burning love and compassion for medical practitioners in the writing of Call The Midwife has any true birthplace, it was in that shower room.
She continued to improve. Then suddenly she started to feel unwell. Her temperature spiked. Her attention span started to fade.
The nurses began to hurry about, and the doctor was called. I could see their frowns. I could tell what they meant.
No. Not now. Not after all this. The danger had always been there. Relapse. Reinfection. Failed repair. Now it was real.
Heidi was distressed. I held her hand t ightly as the nurse wheeled her away for a scan. I watched the doors close behind her again.
I rushed into the nearby toilet and found a vacant cubicle. I sat on the seat. I started to sob â" great gasping sobs twisting my face and smearing my sleeve.Â
I cried like a baby â" on and on and on. I wailed. I will never, never feel so helpless as I did at that moment. Never so alone as in that place. Iâd lost her. My beautiful, brilliant, better self.
I started to pray â" dredging up old Catholic prayers from my childhood â" all those years of comfortable agnosticism thrown aside in my desperation and despair.
I begged whoever was listening for mercy. I offered any bargain for her returning health; any price I could pay, I would. Just please, please donât make this happen. Not to her. Not now. Not after all this.
Eve ntually, I bathed my red eyes in the sink and went outside to wait.
The nurse sat with me. She was so gentle. Calmly running through the hopes. Iâll never be able to repay the simplicity of her kindness.
When the test results came back, they proved inconclusive. The relapse was a bit of a mystery really â" so frightening at the time, but ultimately it marked the turning-point. The storm before the calm.
Stephen is one of the McGann acting dynasty and is pictured with his brother Paul, left
That night, Heidi had a peculiar dream. âI was walking through a beautiful estuary â" but instead of being a single channel of water, there were little springs coming up through the sand,â she recalled. âBeautiful little fountains of life bubbling up all about.
âIn the middle of the estuary was an upturned boat, its hull in the air. As I walked past this boat, I remember thinking: âI havenât got to sail on that.â It was like a Ship of Death.
âI carried on, walking away from the boat, through the beautiful estuary.â
The next day, Heidi had improved so much that she was able to move into a general ward.Â
It would be another two weeks before she left the hospital, 20lb lighter th an when she came in.
By summer, she was told it was safe to go on holiday. We booked a trip to Crete, and I was able to watch the miracle of my wife playing in the water with my little son.
It wasnât an estuary, but it was just as good. And the laughter of our 14-month-old child bubbled up like fountains of life.
Nineteen years on, I ask Heidi how she thinks the experience changed her. Sheâs silent for a moment.
âThe simplest thing I can say is that it stops you being so afraid,â she says.Â
âWhen youâve dealt with something completely terrifying and come out the other side, you can reflect on it and think: âWell . . . I came back.â
âSometimes all you need to know about life is that there can be another chapter.â
And me?
I still feel shock and a rush of raw gratitude. And Iâm grateful that a part of me will always be sobbing in that toilet cubicle â" stripped of all distraction, understanding clearly what was most important.
Every day is beautiful and fragile. Every day has the possibility for love.
- Adapted from Flesh And Blood: A History Of My Family In Seven Maladies, by Stephen McGann, published by Simon & Schuster on July 27 at £20. © Stephen McGann 2017.
To buy a copy for £14 (valid to July 22, 2017) call 0844 571 0640 or visit mailbookshop.co.uk. P&P is free on orders over £15.
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