Press Releases

Call the Midwife Season 7 premieres March 25 on WCNY-TV

WCNY, Central New York’s public broadcaster, presents the series premiere of Season 7 of “Call the Midwife” at 8 p.m. March 25 on WCNY-TV. The series will air weekly Sundays at 8 p.m. on WCNY-TV.

For viewing information, visit wcny.org/wheretowatch.

Full episodes of “Call the Midwife” Season 7 will be available to stream the morning after broadcast on all station-branded PBS platforms, including PBS.org and PBS apps for iOS, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Chromecast. “Call the Midwife” seasons 1-6 are now available on DVD and Blu-ray on shopPBS.org. Additional items, including Jennifer Worth’s memoirs, published by Penguin Books, The Life and Times of Call the Midwife, published by Harper Collins, and Doctor Turner’s Casebook, published by Simon & Schuster UK, are also available.

Viewers will be transported back to East London where the Nonnatus House welcomes a new midwife, Lucille Anderson played by Leonie Elliott (Wondrous Oblivion, Danny and the Human Zoo, “Black Mirror”), the first West Indian midwife to be featured as a series regular. Elegant, compassionate and clever, Nurse Lucille is swift to settle in and brings a fresh new energy to life at Nonnatus House. Her story reflects the experiences of Caribbean nurses who traveled to the U.K. in the 1960s to support the expanding National Health Service.

Season 7 of “Call the Midwife” opens as the “Big Freeze” of 1963 continues and the midwives persevere through the intense winter. The nuns and nurses of Nonnatus House are being tested as they have never been before, both personally and professionally. All around them they see the old East End vanishing, as slum clearances make way for bold new tower blocks to accommodate expanding communities. They find themselves facing a wide range of medical challenges, from breech birth to cancer, Huntington’s chorea and cataracts. Trixie and Christopher continue to develop their romance, while Tom and Barbara enjoy life as a married couple. Nurse Crane’s authority is questioned from an unexpected source, and Sister Monica Joan is forced to accept her failing faculties. Additionally, life for the Turners is turned upside down when Shelagh decides to employ an au pair.

Season 6 of “Call the Midwife,” which aired on PBS in Spring 2017, drew an average audience of 3.4 million viewers (P2+). Each of the past four seasons was among the yearly top 10 viewed programs on PBS, with Season 6 ratings the series’ highest since Season 3 in Spring 2014. Last season logged an additional 2.1 million streams on PBS digital platforms, including PBS.org and PBS apps. “Call the Midwife’s” 2017 holiday special marked the annual event’s most-watched performance ever among total viewers (P2+) (Source: TV – Nielsen Live+7 U.S. program estimates.)

“Call the Midwife” has been one of Britain’s most popular drama series since it launched in 2012, and it continues to be one of the most-watched dramas in the U.K. It‎ has earned more than 20 TV awards and nominations, including several from BAFTA, the Royal Television Society and the National TV awards. The series won a Gracie Award for Ensemble Cast in 2017 and has recently been voted the Best Drama of the 21st Century in the BFI & Radio Times Festival Audience Poll. “Call the Midwife” was recommissioned by the BBC for a further three series and three holiday specials, taking the nuns and midwives right into the mid 1960s and “Call the Midwife” to 9 series.

“Call the Midwife” stars Jenny Agutter (“The Railway Children,” “Spooks”) as Sister Julienne, Linda Bassett (“East Is East,” “Lark Rise to Candleford”) as Nurse Phyllis Crane, Judy Parfitt (“Little Dorrit,” Girl With a Pearl Earring), who was nominated for a 2013 Satellite Award for her work as Sister Monica Joan, Helen George (“Hollyoaks,” “Doctors”) as Trixie Franklin, Laura Main (“Monarch of the Glen”) as Shelagh Turner, Charlotte Ritchie (“Life of Riley,” “Fresh Meat”) as Nurse Barbara Hereward, Victoria Yeates (“Holby City”) as Sister Winifred, Jennifer Kirby (“Holby City”) as Nurse Valerie Dyer, Stephen McGann (“Emmerdale”) as Dr. Patrick Turner, Jack Ashton (“Endeavour,” “Of Mary”) as Tom Hereward, Cliff Parisi (“EastEnders”) as Fred, Annabelle Apsion (“Shameless”) as Violet Buckle, Daniel Laurie as Reggie, Jack Hawkins (“Holby City”) as Christopher Dockerill and Leonie Elliott (Wondrous Oblivion, Danny and the Human Zoo, “Black Mirror”) as Nurse Lucille Anderson. Vanessa Redgrave voices the mature Jennifer Worth.

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