Jenny Agutter: Last News

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Call the Midwife’s Jenny Agutter on tackling the 70s ‘Sister Julienne might see me on TV’

Jenny Agutter’s television career has spanned over almost 60 years, but nowadays, she’s more widely known for playing Sister Julienne in Call the Midwife. A series that started in 2012, Call the Midwife has been going for over 10 years with over one hundred episodes and counting.The twelfth Christmas Special will air on Christmas Day with series 13 airing in January.
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'What does the future hold?' Jenny Agutter candidly shares fears before marrying husband
Call The Midwife.The show follows the lives of nurses, midwives and nuns in the 1950s and 1960s as they provide care for mothers in London’s poorest areas.Jenny married hotelier Johan Tham in August 1990.Jenny had been living in Hollywood for 17 years but moved back to the UK after meeting her husband on a trip to Bath when she was 36.He didn’t enjoy LA life as much as she did.Jenny became pregnant with her son Jonathan soon after beginning a relationship with Johan.Jenny said the change was good for her. In an unearthed interview with the Daily Express from 2012, she said: “It saved me.“I had got stuck in my ways, ran my life the way I wanted, took holidays when I wished and went where I wanted.“I did have long relationships but they all ended.“I was thinking: ‘Maybe I will just remain single.’"And, more worryingly: ‘What does the future hold?’"Then all this came at once with Johan."It came as a shock but it was the best thing that happened.”When Jenny was pregnant with her son, she found herself in the middle of a real-life labour drama when the baby arrived on Christmas Day - a month before he was due.Jenny went into labour on Christmas Eve and gave birth the next day.Jenny, who became famous for her role in The Railway Children when she was 17, told the Guardian in 2014 that she had so many different midwives because “they all wanted to get off”.She said: “Singing the carols late at night, I got terribly emotional, which I didn’t realise of course was actually the beginnings of labour.”“The obstetrician would check and say, ‘Baby’s not coming yet, just going to carve the turkey’.Then it was the pudding."Then he came back and said, ‘If he doesn’t arrive now, it’ll be Boxing Day.
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