WPC 56
WPC 56 is a British police procedural drama series created by Dominique Moloney and broadcast on BBC One from 2013 to 2015.[1][2] The programme centres on Gina Dawson, portrayed by Jennie Jacques, as the inaugural Woman Police Constable assigned to the fictional Brinford Constabulary in the West Midlands during 1956, navigating investigations into local crimes while confronting entrenched resistance from male colleagues accustomed to an all-male force.[1][3] Each of the three series comprises five episodes, depicting Dawson's professional trials, including assaults, disappearances, and departmental rivalries, set against the post-war social constraints of mid-1950s Britain.[4][5] Produced by BBC Birmingham, the series emphasises period authenticity in its portrayal of early female integration into policing, drawing from historical accounts of women officers limited to auxiliary roles like handling juvenile cases and traffic duties prior to broader reforms.[6] Key supporting characters include Sergeant Sidney Fenton (Charlie De'Ath) and Chief Constable Arthur Coulson (John Bowler), whose interactions highlight institutional hierarchies and interpersonal tensions within the station.[7] Filming occurred at locations around Birmingham, such as the Black Country Living Museum, to evoke the era's industrial landscape.[8] The show garnered a 7.3/10 rating on IMDb from over 1,300 user assessments, with viewers noting its effective recreation of 1950s customs, dialogue, and investigative procedures.[1]Overview
Premise and Historical Context
WPC 56 is a British period crime drama series that centers on the experiences of the first female police constables recruited to the fictional Brinford Police Station in the West Midlands town of Brinford, set in 1956.[2] The narrative primarily follows WPC Gina Dawson in the first two series as she navigates the challenges of integrating into a male-dominated constabulary, confronting institutional sexism, chauvinism, and internal rivalries while performing police duties.[1] In the third series, the focus shifts to WPC Annie Taylor, who assumes a similar pioneering role at the same station, emphasizing the persistent barriers faced by women in law enforcement during this era.[9] Historically, Women Police Constables (WPCs) were first formally appointed in the United Kingdom under the Police Act of 1916, initially to address wartime needs such as patrolling and moral welfare duties, though their roles remained severely restricted thereafter.[10] By the 1950s, WPCs constituted a small fraction of police forces, numbering around 2,500 across English, Welsh, and Scottish constabularies by 1960 out of total forces exceeding 80,000 officers, or less than 5% nationally.[11] These officers were largely confined to specialized tasks involving women, children, and juveniles—such as taking statements from female victims, escorting female prisoners, and handling domestic or welfare cases—due to prevailing views that positioned them as complements to male officers rather than equivalents, with senior female leaders often reinforcing that women performed duties "by virtue of their sex" rather than seeking parity.[11][12] The series reflects these realities by portraying the causal dynamics of hierarchical resistance and operational limitations, including prohibitions on unescorted night patrols and lower pay scales for WPCs, which persisted amid broader institutional sexism that kept women in separate departments under female supervision until gradual reforms in the 1960s and full integration in the 1970s.[12][6] This depiction draws from documented petty departmental grudges and everyday prejudices that undermined female officers' authority, without which the marginalization of WPCs—evident in their exclusion from general patrol and investigative roles—cannot be fully understood.[1] Such constraints stemmed from entrenched cultural norms prioritizing male oversight, limiting WPCs' legal powers and career progression until legislative changes dismantled segregated structures.[12]Series Format and Production Basics
WPC 56 is structured as a police procedural drama consisting of three series totaling 15 episodes, each approximately 45 minutes in duration.[4][13] The episodes aired in daytime slots on BBC One, beginning with the first series from 18 March to 22 March 2013 and concluding with the third series in March 2015.[14][15] This format features self-contained investigations resolved within episodes, interwoven with ongoing personal storylines among the characters at the fictional Brinford Constabulary in the West Midlands.[1] Created by Dominique Moloney, who also penned multiple episodes, the series was commissioned by BBC Birmingham as a daytime production emphasizing grounded, character-focused narratives over spectacle.[6][16] Set in 1956 amid Britain's post-war economic rebuilding and prevailing social norms, including gender roles in policing, the show prioritizes historical detail in depicting routine police work and interpersonal dynamics rather than sensationalized crime or action sequences.[17][18] Production reflected its modest daytime budget through location filming in and around Birmingham, including sites like the Black Country Living Museum, to evoke period authenticity.[8]Cast and Characters
Main Characters and Casting
Jennie Jacques portrayed WPC Gina Dawson, the pioneering female constable introduced in the first two series (2013–2014), who joins Brinford Police Station after completing two years of probationary training at Divisional Headquarters in Birmingham. Returning to her West Midlands hometown, Dawson navigates institutional resistance and proves her determination within the force.[19][3] Claudia Jessie assumed the lead role as WPC Annie Taylor in the third series (2015), succeeding Dawson as the station's female officer and adapting to the challenges of 1950s policing with a distinct presence. Jessie's casting marked a transition in the series' central female character, emphasizing continuity in themes of gender integration while introducing new interpersonal dynamics at the station.[15] Charles De'Ath played Sergeant Sidney Fenton across all three series, serving as the desk sergeant who maintains operational oversight and reflects prevailing attitudes toward authority and discipline in the post-war police environment. Mark Healy depicted PC Graham Bell, a junior constable whose role adds youthful perspective and supports team interactions central to station leadership.[20][21]Supporting and Recurring Roles
Sergeant Sidney Fenton, played by Charlie De'Ath, recurs across all three series in 15 episodes as a station sergeant exemplifying the era's rough-hewn policing culture. Characterized by corruption—including accepting bribes, coercing confessions through beatings, and tampering with evidence—Fenton also displays overt racism and homophobia, mirroring unfiltered 1950s prejudices within law enforcement.[22] His brusque camaraderie with fellow male officers underscores resistance to female integration, often manifesting in overt sexism toward WPCs like Gina Dawson.[23] Chief Superintendent Arthur Coulson, portrayed by John Bowler, provides recurring senior oversight at Brinford station, appearing in leadership capacities that navigate departmental politics and post-war resource constraints. Coulson's authoritative presence influences case resolutions, highlighting hierarchical tensions in a force adapting to modernization amid austerity.[7][20] Desk Sergeant John Swift, enacted by James Barriscale, handles frontline administrative and logistical roles, appearing recurrently to facilitate station operations and procedural workflows. These supporting officers collectively depict the male-dominated environment's blend of loyalty and friction, informing interpersonal dynamics without dominating investigative arcs.[24] Recurring community figures, such as local informants and petty criminals, populate episodes to illustrate class divides and economic strains of the 1950s Midlands, often clashing with station personnel over minor infractions tied to hardship. Antagonists in these roles underscore causal links between post-war deprivation and rising petty crime, serving ensemble support for case-driven narratives.[1]Production
Development and Writing
WPC 56 was conceived by Dominique Moloney, who drew inspiration from the actual histories of women police constables serving in Britain during the 1950s, a period when female officers were newly integrated into regular forces but confined to limited duties such as handling cases involving women and children.[6] Moloney aimed to portray these pioneers realistically, highlighting their operational constraints within a patriarchal institution resistant to change, including restrictions on investigative authority and reliance on basic evidential methods amid nascent forensic practices like fingerprinting without advanced DNA analysis.[25] The BBC commissioned the series as an original daytime procedural, with its first episode airing on 18 March 2013, to explore procedural storytelling through a female protagonist navigating sexism and procedural hierarchies.[16] Moloney served as lead writer, scripting at least nine episodes across the three series to preserve thematic continuity, such as the clash between entrenched police traditions and incremental institutional reforms prompted by postwar societal shifts.[26] Scripts emphasized empirical hurdles of the era, including challenges in gathering admissible evidence under pre-modern legal standards and the interpersonal dynamics of male colleagues' grudges and skepticism toward female competence, without imposing anachronistic narratives of rapid empowerment.[27] This approach involved consultations with historical accounts to maintain fidelity to documented WPC roles, such as exclusion from frontline arrests until later policy evolutions, ensuring depictions aligned with verifiable records of limited autonomy rather than idealized progressivism.[6] No extensive rewrites were publicly documented, reflecting a streamlined process focused on authentic period realism over iterative overhauls.[25]Filming and Technical Aspects
Principal photography for WPC 56 occurred primarily in Birmingham and the surrounding West Midlands region across its three series from 2013 to 2015, leveraging local period-appropriate sites to recreate 1950s Britain.[28][8] The Black Country Living Museum in Dudley served as a key location for exterior streetscapes, providing preserved 1950s-era buildings and infrastructure that enhanced historical authenticity without relying on constructed sets.[28][16] Additional venues included Chateau Impney in Droitwich for upscale interiors and an abandoned factory unit in Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter for industrial scenes, alongside sites like Cannon Hill Park and Birmingham Town Hall.[8][29] Production emphasized practical location shooting and period props sourced from museums and archives to minimize digital intervention, aligning with the BBC Birmingham team's approach to gritty, era-specific realism on a daytime drama budget.[30] Vehicles such as Hillman Minx, Morris Minor, and Ford Consul models were imported to sites like the Black Country Living Museum, alongside restored buses from its collection, to populate scenes with accurate 1950s traffic.[31][32] Costume and prop departments drew from historical police artifacts for uniforms and equipment, addressing sourcing challenges inherent to limited budgets by prioritizing regional heritage resources over custom fabrication.[31] Cinematography, handled by BBC Birmingham's in-house crew, utilized natural lighting and handheld techniques in real interiors to convey the era's post-war austerity, avoiding heavy CGI in favor of on-location authenticity that captured the West Midlands' industrial texture.[30] This method, while logistically demanding due to weather and site availability, ensured visual fidelity to 1956 Brinford without post-production alterations, as confirmed in production reports.[16] Budget constraints necessitated efficient scheduling, with shoots often confined to weekdays and coordinated with local authorities to secure period vehicles and extras.[8]Cast Transitions and Changes
Jennie Jacques, who portrayed WPC Gina Dawson in the first two series, departed after the conclusion of series 2 in 2014 due to scheduling conflicts with other productions, including her role in the History Channel series Vikings.[33] This exit aligned with the narrative's depiction of transient WPC roles in 1950s policing, where short-term postings were common amid evolving departmental needs.[34] Series 3, airing from March 9, 2015, introduced Claudia Jessie as WPC Annie Taylor, a new recruit at Brinford station, ensuring the central focus on a female constable persisted without disrupting the station's operational continuity.[15] Core male characters, such as Sergeant Sidney Fenton (Charlie De'Ath) and Chief Superintendent Arthur Coulson (John Bowler), remained anchors across all series, preserving institutional dynamics and avoiding narrative resets.[35] No reported labor disputes or on-set conflicts drove these shifts; changes stemmed primarily from actors' external commitments, a pattern observed in BBC daytime dramas with limited episode orders that prioritize flexibility over long-term contracts.[33] Such turnover mirrored historical realities of early women in UK policing, where recruitment and retention fluctuated with societal and policy adjustments post-World War II.[34]Episode Guide
Series Overview
WPC 56 comprises three series, each consisting of five episodes broadcast between 2013 and 2015.[4] Episodes typically run for approximately 45 minutes, yielding a total runtime of about four hours per series.[13] The program centers on the experiences of female police constables in a 1950s West Midlands constabulary, emphasizing procedural investigations into everyday crimes such as thefts, assaults, and minor disturbances amid pervasive institutional sexism.[1] The narrative progresses thematically across the series: Series 1 depicts the initial struggles of Gina Dawson, the first woman police constable at Brinford station, as she navigates integration into a male-dominated environment.[36] Series 2 escalates to broader departmental tensions, incorporating issues like sexual harassment and internal conflicts while maintaining a focus on routine policing duties.[37] In Series 3, a new WPC, Annie Taylor, assumes the central role, confronting analogous professional and societal barriers in the evolving station dynamics.[15] Structurally, the series employs self-contained episodic formats for each case, with light serialization through ongoing character relationships and minor unresolved personal threads that conclude within the season, avoiding overarching cliffhangers.[1] This approach underscores the procedural nature of low-stakes 1950s policing without delving into high-profile sensationalism.[5]Series 1 (2013)
Series 1 introduces Gina Dawson as the first Woman Police Constable at Brinford station in 1956, highlighting her challenges in a male-dominated force amid routine policing duties and interpersonal conflicts.[38] The five-episode run aired on BBC One starting 18 March 2013, broadcast as a daytime drama from Monday to Friday over one week.[16] Episodes center on Dawson's adaptation to restricted roles, where WPCs historically focused on welfare matters involving women and juveniles rather than criminal investigations, reflecting real 1950s practices that confined female officers to supportive functions.[1] This setup underscores tensions from sexism and station dynamics, including petty grudges among officers.[1] In the opener, "Sink or Swim," Dawson faces immediate hazing from colleagues on her debut shift, compounded by encounters with petty thieves, runaways, and neglected children, testing her determination to succeed despite skepticism toward her capabilities.[14] [39] Subsequent episodes escalate with investigations into assaults and disappearances, such as a child disappearance plot involving missing boys, which draws station resources and exposes rivalries in resource allocation and credit assignment.[40] These cases illustrate Dawson's push against jurisdictional limits, as she assists in pursuits typically reserved for male detectives, navigating welfare-oriented tasks like family interventions alongside emerging criminal probes.[1] The arc peaks in "Nature of the Beast," the fourth episode, where Dawson witnesses an attack on colleague Eddie Coulson, prompting her involvement in tracking the assailant amid a deepening mystery tied to the missing child; her contributions here affirm her investigative potential, setting a template for blending procedural elements with personal vindication against initial resistance.[41] [40] Overall, the series establishes core procedural rhythms through these standalone yet interconnected cases, emphasizing Dawson's gradual integration without resolving broader institutional biases.[42]Series 2 (2014)
Series 2 of WPC 56 consists of five episodes broadcast daily from 10 to 14 February 2014 on BBC One, continuing the narrative in the fictional Brinford police station during 1956.[43] The season escalates tensions from the previous series by introducing investigations into serious crimes such as a local councilor's murder and a missing girlfriend, alongside a proliferation of counterfeit currency, which draw the team into broader probes of institutional misconduct.[44] Returning characters face heightened personal risks, including Sergeant Fenton's deepening involvement in corrupt activities that ultimately come under scrutiny, reflecting documented challenges of graft and internal distrust within mid-20th-century British policing amid post-war societal strains.[45] [46] Gina Dawson encounters intensified barriers to professional advancement, compounded by pervasive sexism and her entanglement in high-stakes assignments that test her resolve against superior officers' improprieties, such as Inspector Coulson's increasingly threatening advances.[45] Interpersonal conflicts deepen, with grudges among colleagues exacerbating morale issues akin to those reported in 1950s police forces, where readjustment to peacetime duties and rigid hierarchies fostered resentment and lapses in discipline.[1] [47] Family secrets emerge as pivotal elements in several cases, intertwining personal histories with criminal inquiries and forcing characters like Dawson to navigate ethical dilemmas within a male-dominated environment skeptical of female efficacy.[44] The season concludes on a note of lingering peril, with exposed corruptions and unresolved antagonisms setting the stage for leadership shifts in subsequent episodes, while underscoring the precarious position of reform-minded officers in an era of entrenched traditions.[45]| Episode | Title | Air Date | Key Plot Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cry, Cry, Cry | 10 February 2014 | Initiation of a murder investigation involving a councilor, pulling the station into complex local ties.[43] |
| 2 | Dead Man Dancing | 11 February 2014 | Probe into counterfeit notes escalates risks for Gina in undercover work.[48] [43] |
| 3 | Eye of the Storm | 12 February 2014 | Intensifying departmental strains amid ongoing cases.[43] |
| 4 | That Old Devil Called Love | 13 February 2014 | Exposure of Fenton's corruption and Coulson's menacing pursuit of Gina.[45] |
| 5 | The Harder They Fall | 14 February 2014 | Climactic confrontations leaving threats unresolved.[49] |