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10 Shows Like 'Call the Midwife' You Should Watch Next

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In its 15th season, unlikely phenomenon Call the Midwife hasn't slowed down: Season 16 is already confirmed, as are a feature film and a WWII-era prequel series. Plenty of babies still need to be born, it would seem.

Initially set in 1957, with the current plots entering the 1970s, the show takes place in and around Poplar, London, one of the city's most desperately poor districts. As the National Health Service is born, secular trained midwives team up with the nuns of Nonnatus House, a nursing convent that had been in the business of providing medical care to the area's poor for decades. Though occasionally veering into schmaltz, the show's melodrama is generally well-earned, often dealing frankly with issues of women's health that other shows are still too timid to broach. If you've already plowed through all the available episodes, here are 10 more series with similar themes.

The Bletchley Circle (2012 – 2014)

Starting, like Call the Midwife, in the, mid-1950s, this series follows the women (mostly) who worked at the Bletchley Park estate during World War II. The workforce was charged operating cryptographic machinery and translating documents—essential code-breaking work that was largely forgotten by history, buried under heavy classification. This show isn't exactly about those events, though, instead focusing on a group of four women who reunite several years later to use their skills to hunt a serial killer. It's a juicy way to connect with the real story of women who served the war effort with a juicy plot, and the verisimilitude is legit—the show draws contrasts between the women's lives during wartime and their more domestic expectations once it was all over. Stream The Bletchley Circle on Peacock and Prime Video.


All Creatures Great and Small (2020 – )

An update of a venerable British franchise based on a series of autobiographical novels from writer James Herriot, All Creatures takes us back to the rural Yorkshire Dales of the 1930s and '40s (as the series progresses into World War II and beyond), with a Scottish vet (Nicholas Ralph) moving to the small farming town of Darrowby to take up a job as a veterinary assistant. Animals are in jeopardy on a weekly basis, but the big-hearted show only rarely goes for the gut punch—favoring instead lots of baby cows and cameos from local pampered Pekinese Tricki Woo. Anna Madeley's housekeeper Audrey Hall and Rachel Shenton's farmer Helen keep the often-struggling practice together. It's not quite the human drama of Call the Midwife, though it does deal with some real challenges of the era. Stream All Creatures Great and Small on Prime Video and PBS.


Land Girls (2009 – 2011)

Stepping back a few years into World War II proper, the subject here is another less-well-remembered bit of history: The Women's Land Army, and the "Land Girls" who signed up to learn about farming and agriculture in order to replace male farmworkers who'd gone off to fight. Here, four very different women, with very different reasons for signing up, arrive at the farm on the Hoxley estate in order to serve their country, but also to figure out what they want out of life. Like the best shows of its kind, Land Girls also deals with issues contemporary to women of the era, as in the very first episode when the women are confronted by segregation among the American soldiers with whom they come into contact. Stream Land Girls on PBS or buy it from Prime Video.


Grantchester (2014 – )

In 1950s and '60s Cambridgeshire, Robson Green plays overworked, cynical WWII-veteran police detective Geordie Keating, while James Norton, Tom Brittney, and Rishi Nair (in succession) play well-meaning but occasionally straying local priests who help solve the inevitable string of murders. While generally adhering to the cozy mystery-of-the-week format, the show occasionally dives into heavy relationship drama as well as some real-world drama, often involving Al Weaver's curate Leonard Finch, who struggles with the clerical and legal ramifications of being gay. Stream Grantchester on Netflix and PBS.


Virgin River (2019 – )

It's not late 20th century London, but rather contemporary Northern California, but we still get some of Call the Midwife's life-affirming charm alongside modern midwifery. Virgin River stars Alexandra Breckenridge as Mel, a nurse practitioner and midwife who finds unexpected complications when she moves to the title Northern California town on a one-year contract. That was seven romantic seasons ago, s you have years' worth of high-end comfort viewing to enjoy. Stream Virgin River on Netflix.


Cable Girls (2017 – 2020)

Whatever the genre, there's a recurring theme across many of these shows, and it as to do with women leaving familiar settings and taking on roles and responsibilities in field that are either altogether new, or new to women. Set in 1928, this Spanish import finds four women from different backgrounds seeking employment at a telecommunications company in Madrid. Ángeles is an experienced switchboard operator with kids to feed, Carlota is a society gal looking to get out from under her controlling family, Marga's looking for an adventure, and Lidia has been forced into a criminal enterprise. The show blends empowering history with enough telenovela-style twists to propel it through five seasons. Stream Cable Girls on Netflix.


The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017 – 2023)

One of Prime’s first and buzziest original series, this comedy-drama from Amy Sherman-Palladino (Gilmore Girls) follows Midge Maisel (Rachel Brosnahan), a New York housewife of the late 1950s who discovers a talent for stand-up comedy. Inspired by the real-life careers of comedians like Totie Fields and Joan Rivers, the show is both warm and funny, with great performances and dialogue; it also achieves something rare in being a show about comedy that’s actually funny. A New York housewife striking out to become a stand up might not pair up exactly with London midwifery, but Maisel and Midwife share the exhilarating feeling of women broadening their own horizons in the middle of the last century. Stream The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel on Prime Video.


The Crimson Field (2014)

Perhaps inspired by Call the Midwife itself, The Crimson Field goes back a bit further into the 20th century: specifically, a fictional World War I field hospital on the French coast. Oona Chaplin star as Kitty Trevelyan, a somewhat surly (sassy, even) new nurse, joined by several other mostly-upper-class women who are entirely new to both the realities of war, and to being told what to do. It's a particularly glossy period drama, for better and for worse (a WWI medical drama could have done with a bit more grit), but it's a very watchable window into history, with some fabulous performances. Stream The Crimson Field on Prime Video and Tubi.


The Hour (2011 – 2012)

With a rather brilliant cast and impeccable period style, The Hour charts the rise of a (fictional) BBC current affairs program, led by women and premiering in the middle of the 1956 Suez Crisis—a challenge in itself, as the government isn't particularly keen to have its missteps reported on (luckily, such censorship could never happen today). Producer Bel Rowley (Romola Garai) chooses war correspondent Lix Storm (the great Anna Chancellor) as foreign correspondent alongside less-accomplished anchor, Hector Madden (Dominic West), while scrappy reporter Freddie Lyon (Ben Whislaw) is desperate to get onboard. There are spies, murder, and plenty of then-current affairs spread across the show's two seasons. Stream The Hour on Tubi.


London Hospital (2006 – 2009)

Particularly in its early seasons, Call the Midwife highlighted the challenges of practicing medicine in the poorest areas of London in a time before medical standards were what they are today. London Hospital could almost serve as prequel, set among the nurses and in the Receiving Room of the real-life Royal London Hospital during the early years of the 20th century. Each episode is based, however loosely, on real-life cases taken from nurses' logs and diaries, and the episodes present each incident with the pacing of a modern medical drama, eschewing period-show gloss. Broken up into three groups of episodes set in 1906, 1907, and 1909, we're faced with the challenges of early anesthesia, a world before antibiotics, and innovations in X-ray technology without a full understanding of the dangers of radiation. Rent London Hospital from Apple TV+.

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