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midwife show

Call the Midwife is the main “midwife show” people are talking about right now, with new episodes confirmed into 2026 and some notable changes ahead.

What is the “midwife show”?

Most people using the phrase “midwife show” are referring to the long‑running BBC period drama Call the Midwife.

It follows midwives and nuns serving families in London’s East End, starting in the late 1950s and now moving into the 1970s.

Core vibe and themes

  • Warm, emotional medical drama with strong historical and social themes (NHS, women’s health, poverty, immigration).
  • Mix of heartbreaking storylines (illness, difficult births, social injustice) and uplifting moments of community, friendship, and new life.
  • Each episode usually weaves several medical cases with an ongoing character arc for the midwives and their families.

What’s going on with the show in 2025–2026?

The show is still active and planning ahead, but it is also clearly moving toward the later years of its historical setting.

Season 15 (airing in 2026)

  • The BBC has confirmed Call the Midwife season 15, with eight episodes, scheduled to begin in early 2026 (January 11th, 8 p.m. in the UK).
  • The new season is set in 1971 and includes storylines around the Women’s Liberation Movement, including a bra‑burning protest outside Nonnatus House.
  • Medical plots will tackle topics like premature birth, cancer, and issues linked to slavery and exploitation.

Beyond season 15: film and prequel

  • The creative team is working on a prequel series and a feature film set in the Call the Midwife universe, which are now in pre‑production.
  • A 16th series has been confirmed as “in due course,” even though the main series’ filming is temporarily paused while work happens on the prequel and film.

Big change: no “traditional” Christmas special in 2026

The show is famous for its tear‑jerking Christmas specials, which have aired every year since 2012.

  • The creator, Heidi Thomas, has confirmed there will be no “traditional” Christmas special in 2026.
  • She describes it as a temporary pause, not a permanent cancellation, pointing out that very few shows have kept up a yearly Christmas special for 15 years.
  • The gap is partly to make room for the prequel series and the planned film, which are intended as “exciting” new ways to expand the world.

Fan and forum chatter

Online discussions and forums add a bit of extra context and speculation around where the “midwife show” might be heading.

  • Some fans note that the show’s timeline is now in the early 1970s, when many small community maternity homes like the real‑life Nonnatus House were closed and services moved to large hospitals, so they expect the series to naturally wrap up around the late 1970s.
  • Others emphasize how much the series has meant to real midwives and viewers, praising its portrayal of birth work and community care.
  • There are also trending emotional clips and posts online (for example, people reuniting with the midwife who delivered their child), which often get shared in the same spaces as Call the Midwife content because of the similar emotional tone.

Quick FAQ about the “midwife show”

Is Call the Midwife cancelled?

  • No official announcement says the show has been outright cancelled; instead, the BBC and the creators talk about commissioning through 2026 and then shifting focus to a prequel and film, with series 16 planned.

Do I need to watch from season 1?

  • You can jump in on more recent seasons and still follow the weekly medical plots, but the emotional payoff is much richer if you start earlier and follow the midwives’ lives over time.

Where is it set now in time?

  • The show has moved from the 1950s into the early 1970s, with season 15 specifically set in 1971.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.