*** DEBUG START ***
*** DEBUG END ***

TV review: Time, Union with David Olusoga, and Lenny Henry: One of a kind

03 November 2023

BBC/Matt Squire

Abi (Tamara Lawrance), an inmate, talks to the prison chaplain, Marie-Louise (Siobhan Finnernan), in Time (BBC1, Sundays)

Abi (Tamara Lawrance), an inmate, talks to the prison chaplain, Marie-Louise (Siobhan Finnernan), in Time (BBC1, Sundays)

WORK does not pay, prison does not work, is the stance of the second series of the Roman Catholic writer Jimmy McGovern’s prison drama Time (BBC1, Sundays). HM Prison Carlingford, a women’s prison, is a well-worked mesh of dysfunction, desperation, and violence; and yet McGovern’s handling of pace and character pulls us into his world.

Ensemble playing by the mainly female cast is amazing. Opening with Jodie Whittaker’s Orla organising her children’s breakfast, the mother appears poised and dressed for a day at the office

A close-up of Orla jolting along in a prison van, screaming at the driver to give her a phone, to let her children know what has happened, conveys the black suit’s failed purpose. Orla’s cellmates are Abi (Tamara Lawrance), who is outed for infanticide, and a heroin addict, Kelsey (Bella Ramsey), whose prison medical reveals pregnancy.

Kelsey is a compelling mix of street sassiness and vulnerability, and, learning that keeping the baby leads to a shorter sentence, she discovers a newly minted future. Weaving between incarcerated lead characters and prison-staff chorus is the chaplain, Marie-Louise (played by Siobhan Finneran), who does not mention God, and keeps a therapeutic silence when her flock raise practical woes outside her scope.

Her silence continues under Abi’s interrogation about the exhilaration of “weeping, put-upon women”. Her motivation for a ministry transfer from male prisons distils the hallmarks of engaging TV drama: “Nine out of ten men won’t talk, and nine out of ten women won’t shut up.”

Making excellence appear effortless continued with Union with David Olusoga (BBC2, Monday of last week). Charting Ireland’s journey since the Acts of Union 1800 to independence, the historian told the parallel early-20th-century stories of a Protestant family near Shankhill Road, Belfast, who joined the Ulster Volunteer Force to remain part of the UK, and their Falls Road neighbours, who supported the Easter Rising.

The narrative fast-forwarded to the Troubles, and then Scotland’s derelict Ravenscraig steelworks — a post-industrial landscape of spectral trees: a fitting image for the premise that union appeals most during prosperity and equality.

Sir Lenny Henry’s father, Winston, worked in a Smethwick foundry, and the entertainer credited his mother, Winifred, for a career spanning from New Faces in 1975 to Othello in 2009, and writing TV dramas. While Lenny Henry: One of a kind (ITV1, Thursday of last week) omitted Winifred’s sending her son to Sunday school for 14 years, contributors’ testaments to Sir Lenny’s multi-million-pound charity efforts, and the star’s insistence on a worldwide concept of “neighbour”, speak to the power of his formative Christian years.

Gillean Craig is away.

Browse Church and Charity jobs on the Church Times jobsite

Church Times Bookshop

Save money on books reviewed or featured in the Church Times. To get your reader discount:

> Click on the “Church Times Bookshop” link at the end of the review.

> Call 0845 017 6965 (Mon-Fri, 9.30am-5pm).

The reader discount is valid for two months after the review publication date. E&OE

Forthcoming Events

 

Church Times/Sarum College:

Traditions of Christian Spirituality

January - May 2024

This is a five-part series on major strands of the Christian spiritual tradition.

Book individual session tickets or sign up for the full programme

 

Companions on the Way: a retreat in preparation for Lent:

Saturday 10 February 2024 - 10am - 1pm GMT

Jay Hulme, Rachel Mann, Rob Marshall, Nick Papadopulos, Richard Carter and worship by the St Martin’s Voices

Online Tickets available

 

RS Thomas & ME Eldridge Society in association with Church Times:

RS Thomas Winter webinar 2024

Saturday 17 February 2024 - 4pm - 5.15pm GMT

Malcolm Guite in conversation with Jon Gower

Online Tickets available

 

Church Times/RSCM:

Festival of Faith and Music

26 - 28 April 2024

See the full programme on the festival website. 

Early bird tickets available

 

 

Green Church Awards

Closing date: 30 June 2024

Read more details about the awards

 

The Church Times Archive

Read reports from issues stretching back to 1863, search for your parish or see if any of the clergy you know get a mention.

FREE for Church Times subscribers.

Explore the archive

Welcome to the Church Times

​To explore the Church Times website fully, please sign in or subscribe.

Non-subscribers can read four articles for free each month. (You will need to register.)