The actor speaks exclusively to RadioTimes.com about her new ITV drama and her decision to move away from female trauma in her work.

By Abby Robinson

Published: Sunday, 18 February 2024 at 08:00 AM


“I was blown away,” said Joanne Froggatt of her latest project Breathtaking. “I actually shed tears reading the scripts, and I don’t think that’s ever happened to me.” 

The three-part ITV drama is based on Rachel Clarke’s memoir of working as a doctor on the NHS frontline during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I’ve welled up before, amazing scripts do hit you, but I was sat with tears streaming down my face at one point,” she added. “It was so unbelievably affecting.” 

It’s a departure from the crime and mystery thrillers that have come to define Froggatt’s career of late, such as Liar and Angela Black – both of which were written by Harry and Jack Williams, who are renowned for their twisty-turny plots – and of course her role as humble housemaid Anna Bates in international smash hit Downton Abbey.

But it was precisely that distinction that appealed to her.

“When [director] Craig [Viveiros, who also directed Angela Black] called me about Breathtaking and said would you be interested, I was like, ‘Yes, this sounds exactly like what I’ve been waiting for.’ I had this overwhelming urge to be a part of this story.

“It felt so authentic and so truthful. I was just like, ‘Wow, this needs to be out there. We all need to know about it.’”

Joanne Froggatt in Breathtaking, wearing a face shield and mask
Joanne Froggatt as Abbey in Breathtaking.

Froggatt leads the cast as Dr Abbey Henderson, an acute medicine consultant who is a “fictional character”. But the impossible conditions she’s forced to work in during the outbreak will be intensely familiar to swathes of medical professionals, courtesy of meticulously researched writing by Clarke, Line of Duty’s Jed Mercurio and actor Prasanna Puwanarajah (The Crown, Payback) – both of whom also used to be doctors. 

“Rachel herself and other medical advisors were on hand 24/7,” explained Froggatt. “They put us through a sort of medical bootcamp, and we had a team of ICU nurses that came in to advise as well. They were integral to our performances.”

The production design on Breathtaking is also so convincing that you truly believe you’ve been catapulted into the midst of a hospital that is creaking at the seams as the demands of the pandemic grow with each passing moment. 

“The ethos was this has to be the most realistic portrayal of medicine we’ve ever seen on television,” said Froggatt. “And there were so many times on set where me and the other cast members and crew just went, ‘God, this feels so real, doesn’t it? It just feels so real.’ It really stopped you in your tracks.”