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THE WOMAN IN THE WALL. BBC 1 sun 9pm - TV PACE. NO SPOILERS

651 replies

Blondeshavemorefun · 21/08/2023 21:56

this is a 6 part drama

1 is shown sun and then 2 on the monday

3456 the following 4 Sundays

it’s will no doubt be on iPlayer but try and not binge lovely people in my phone 😂😂😂

this will be tv paced

Ruth Wilson and Daryl McCormack are teaming up for a gripping new BBC drama, which is inspired by the horrifying revelations around Ireland's Magdalene Laundries.

The Woman In The Wall follows the horrors experienced by Lorna Brady (Ruth Wilson) is a woman from the small, fictional Irish town of Kilkinure, who wakes one morning to find a corpse in her house.

Lorna is chilled to the core as she has no idea who the dead woman is or if she could even be responsible for the apparent murder herself. This is a deadly possibility because Lorna suffers from extreme bouts of sleepwalking, which started around the time she was ripped from her life at the age of 15 and incarcerated in the Kilkinure Convent.

The Woman in the Wall follows Lorna Brady (Wilson), a woman who was incarcerated in a convent from a young age, where she traumatically gave birth – only to have the baby taken away from her to whereabouts unknown.

The awful treatment she endured continues to impact her life, causing extreme bouts of sleepwalking that end with her waking up in strange places with no memory of how she got there.

While her specific story is a work of fiction, the Magdalene Laundries were very real and are thought to have blighted the lives of tens of thousands of women.

Although their history dates back further, more is known about the practices of these institutions in the 20th century, where inmates entered via the criminal justice system, reformatory schools and the Health and Social Services sector.

Once inside, they would have to carry out unpaid labour, while many former inmates have reported being abused.

Magdalene Laundries became the subject of a media scandal in the 1990s, when a mass grave holding 155 bodies was discovered on the former grounds of one such institution in Drumcondra, Dublin.

OP posts:
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benoticanarsed · 21/09/2023 09:03

Yes when he fell through the floor i dodo assumed there would be the bodies of the babies. I'm glad there weren't though as that was too obvious.

I skyways binge or wait until all of the episodes are available. I watched them all last week so just waiting for the last one.

RandomForest · 21/09/2023 11:24

I thought the falling through the floor scene was insinuating child sex abuse, running away from the elderly priest, towards the older children who were not adopted or sold at birth.

LadyEloise1 · 21/09/2023 13:07

Yes I thought too that he was running from a sexual predator priest.

placemats · 21/09/2023 14:04

The final episode is this Sunday. I hope Lorna gets some sort of closure.

Emotionalsupportviper · 21/09/2023 15:40

LadyEloise1 · 21/09/2023 08:29

@Emotionalsupportviper
I too thought they would find the bodies of the children whose death certs were faked, buried somewhere inappropriate as happened at Tuam and probably Bessborough and other places too.

Tuam was the place I was thinking of, I'm sure. I couldn't remember the name. Thank you.

If it's the one where the bodies were found by two little lads playing in the grounds, that's definitely the one I was thinking of. It broke my heart.

PhilippePhiloppe · 21/09/2023 16:23

I’m still not totally sure what the role of the NSPCC was - were they involved in the cover up? Or were they hidden from him?

LadyEloise1 · 21/09/2023 17:47

Yes that is Tuam @Emotionalsupportviper.
A local historian, Catherine Corless has worked tirelessly to publicise the burial of hundreds of babies and infants in a septic tank buried underground.
A couple of years ago I went to a service there to remember those children. Catherine Corless and Peter Mulryan, who was born at the Mother and Baby Home in 1944. Two of his siblings are amongst those buried there he believes.
It was an awful wet December day but they were so welcoming.
It's hard to describe - it's a grassy area, walled in but surrounded by homes. The back of the homes back on to the small site. The houses were built on the Mother and Baby Home land.
I wish someone could put a photo up of the site. I'm a technophobe, sadly and can't.

LadyEloise1 · 21/09/2023 18:39

Thank you @Theblacksheepandme

Theblacksheepandme · 21/09/2023 18:42

You're welcome.

UglyModernWindows · 21/09/2023 20:34

I’m lurker on this thread but came to say I found this article about Tuam and Catherine Corless. It’s very well written and very moving. Also very long so make sure you have a cup of coffee to go with it. I found it so informative.

I was born and grew up in Scandinavia and find it so hard to understand how children and women were treated like this, prisoned against their own wills. Modern day slavery and it really angers me that the Catholic church is closing ranks and not providing answers to the survivors.

The Lost Children of Tuam (Published 2017)

Ireland wanted to forget. But the dead don’t always stay buried.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/10/28/world/europe/tuam-ireland-babies-children.html

UglyModernWindows · 21/09/2023 20:43

@Laundrynotatrainingschool and @PhilippePhiloppe Thank you for sharing your stories ❤️

As a child I was exposed to a very devout fundamental member of a methodist church which is why I’m an atheist now. I find it hard to understand how anyone can still keep their faith when they know what the church has done to innocent people.

PhilippePhiloppe · 21/09/2023 23:46

There’s a BBC podcast about Tuam too for those interested in the details - The Home Babies. I found it a bit slow going and didn’t make it beyond the first episode but have seen it recommended elsewhere so passing that on.

I have faith @UglyModernWindows - I’m an Anglican. But I’m not blind to the flaws of Christianity and the way it has been used to manipulate and abuse people, on a population and individual level. A senior member of my childhood church - a very close family friend - was convicted years later of sexual offences against very young children; the bishop in my husband’s childhood diocese was convicted sexually abusing vulnerable young men.

The church I attend now has a strong focus on safeguarding and championing young and / or vulnerable people - that was a key part of Jesus’ ministry.

But there are monsters in all walks of life and a religious text written thousands of years ago and translated and retranslated and selectively edited is very easy to manipulate.

greengreengrass25 · 22/09/2023 08:07

PhilippePhiloppe · 21/09/2023 23:46

There’s a BBC podcast about Tuam too for those interested in the details - The Home Babies. I found it a bit slow going and didn’t make it beyond the first episode but have seen it recommended elsewhere so passing that on.

I have faith @UglyModernWindows - I’m an Anglican. But I’m not blind to the flaws of Christianity and the way it has been used to manipulate and abuse people, on a population and individual level. A senior member of my childhood church - a very close family friend - was convicted years later of sexual offences against very young children; the bishop in my husband’s childhood diocese was convicted sexually abusing vulnerable young men.

The church I attend now has a strong focus on safeguarding and championing young and / or vulnerable people - that was a key part of Jesus’ ministry.

But there are monsters in all walks of life and a religious text written thousands of years ago and translated and retranslated and selectively edited is very easy to manipulate.

Totally agree

The church in Ireland seemed particularly controlling and interfering in people's lives in a way that it wasn't so much at the same time in England

So more like 1950s in the 80s itms

Is that because of smaller communities?

JSMill · 24/09/2023 19:09

benoticanarsed · 21/09/2023 09:03

Yes when he fell through the floor i dodo assumed there would be the bodies of the babies. I'm glad there weren't though as that was too obvious.

I skyways binge or wait until all of the episodes are available. I watched them all last week so just waiting for the last one.

Me too!

the80sweregreat · 24/09/2023 20:36

I hate the bbc for not putting the final episode up today on I player.

Blondeshavemorefun · 24/09/2023 20:51

Ha ha. You couldn't binge

OP posts:
JenniferBooth · 24/09/2023 20:56

BBC1 wanted to make sure they pull in the viewers on a Sunday night

JenniferBooth · 24/09/2023 21:16

Refurbishing buildings under the guise of charity to get rid of the evidence Very clever

SydneyCarton · 24/09/2023 21:17

So Aoife really was in Lorna’s wall but somehow came out of her coma/trance and got out without breaking through the plaster? And she accidentally killed Father Percy when she confronted him over the stolen babies?

JenniferBooth · 24/09/2023 21:23

Woah that sounds like a threat

Jellykat · 24/09/2023 21:23

Bastard!!!

the80sweregreat · 24/09/2023 21:24

Jellykat · 24/09/2023 21:23

Bastard!!!

Yep ;(

daffodilandtulip · 24/09/2023 21:25

Well he was involved then!

Jellykat · 24/09/2023 21:26

(Waves at the80s)

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