Warning: Spoilers for Baby Reindeer on Netflix.

By Katelyn Mensah

Published: Saturday, 13 April 2024 at 11:45 AM


This article contains a discussion of stalking and sexual assault that some may find upsetting.

Netflix’s new drama series Baby Reindeer is inspired by Richard Gadd’s ordeal of being stalked and follows a fictionalised character played by Gadd as he deals with the impact of such an experience.

At the centre of the seven-part drama series is a character named Martha (Jessica Gunning), a woman who meets Donny (portrayed by Gadd) at a pub and is offered a free cup of tea. This act spirals into a series of events which Donny does not see coming.

What begins with Martha coming to the pub every time Donny starts a shift, turns into incessant e-mails, harassing his family and former partners and threatening phone calls.

Speaking exclusively to RadioTimes.com about her character, actress Jessica Gunning said: “I fell in love with Martha and Donny and their story. There’s an amazing stage direction that [Richard] put in on one of the final episodes just when we lock eyes across the room. It said ‘This isn’t a jump scare moment, this is just two lost people’.

“And I think that’s the through-line that really, really got me from the beginning. They meet each other at a time in each other’s lives where they need each other weirdly.”

Donny standing behind the bar in a pub, talking to Martha
Richard Gadd as Donny in Baby Reindeer.
Netflix

While Donny deals with being stalked by Martha, viewers see Donny deal with a painful chapter of his life in which he was sexually assaulted.

Star and creator Richard Gadd previously told RadioTimes.com that Baby Reindeer is much more than a series about stalking, which is clear throughout the seven episodes as each character deals with different experiences and emotions as they navigate periods of their lives.

Gadd explained: “I think if you look closer at the show, it’s much more than that. It’s not just somebody hiding down a dark alleyway. For me, this show is about trauma… On the surface level, it is a stalking story, but underneath that, it is one that explores the ramifications of trauma.”

Gunning echoed this, adding that Martha could not be played as a “scary person or as a villain”.

“You have to treat her with care and you have to really try and see every side to her as much as possible with a story like this,” she continued.

“I think it would’ve been a shame to play her as a villain because I don’t think she is that.”