Call the Midwife voted 'best drama of the 21st century'

Show takes top spot in poll for BFI And Radio Times Television Festival

Julia Hunt
Sunday 09 April 2017 13:36 EDT
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Call the Midwife has run for six series, with a seventh due to air next year
Call the Midwife has run for six series, with a seventh due to air next year (BBC )

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Call The Midwife has been voted the best drama of the 21st century.

The BBC1 show about midwives in the East End beat hit programmes including Merlin and The Night Manager to the title at the closing night of the BFI And Radio Times Television Festival.

The show had already been picked as the century's best period drama in a Radio Times poll.

The poll was split into six categories, period drama, crime drama, US drama, foreign language drama, sci-fi drama and contemporary drama, with the public then asked to decide the nation's overall favourite.

The final round received more than 23,000 votes, with Call The Midwife beating sci-fi winner Merlin to top spot.

Scandinavian series The Bridge, which won the best foreign language drama category, was third.

The top three were followed by contemporary winner The Night Manager, US drama The West Wing and Happy Valley, which clinched the crime category.

Call The Midwife executive producer Dame Pippa Harris said: “It's an extraordinary honour to have topped this poll, and the whole Call The Midwife team are delighted.

“It's a tribute not only to the brilliance of our ensemble cast but to the skill and passion of Heidi Thomas' writing and to the range and diversity of stories the series has covered.

“I'm personally thrilled that a show which takes an unflinching look at the lives of women and is created by and stars so many talented women, should have struck a chord with such a large audience.”

Written by Ms Thomas, the drama was first broadcast in January 2012.

The seventh series is due to air in 2018.

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