BBC has ‘one big fear’ about historical drama hailed as the next Peaky Blinders

BBC has ‘one big fear’ about historical drama hailed as the next Peaky Blinders

Share:
BBC has ‘one big fear’ about historical drama hailed as the next Peaky Blinders
Author: Pierra Willix
Published: Feb, 04 2025 10:12

The BBC is ‘fearful’ about making links between real-life figures and characters in its upcoming period crime drama Dope Girls. The series, which is due to be released in the coming months, has already been described as a ‘spiritual successor’ to Peaky Blinders and was also ‘inspired by a forgotten time in history’. Set in London in the direct aftermath of WWI, the six-part series follows a ‘newly empowered generation of women are loath to simply return to the kitchen’ and instead utilise Soho’s ‘expanding illicit underground clubland scene as their playground’.

 [BBC show being hailed ?the next Peaky Blinders? contender for best TV of 2025 Dope Girls BBC/Bad Wolf/Sony Pictures Television/Kevin Baker]
Image Credit: Metro [BBC show being hailed ?the next Peaky Blinders? contender for best TV of 2025 Dope Girls BBC/Bad Wolf/Sony Pictures Television/Kevin Baker]

In doing so they will experience opportunities on ‘either side of the law’. One of the show’s main characters is Kate Galloway, played by Julianne Nicholson, a single mother who establishes a nightclub and ‘embraces a life of criminal activities in order to be able to provide for her daughter’. It’s previously been said the series was based on real-life figures including Billie Carleton, Brilliant Chang, Edgar Manning, and Kate Meyrick.

 [Mandatory Credit: Photo by Russell/ANL/REX/Shutterstock (2993897a) Kate Meyrick (1875oo1933) Was An Irish Night Club Owner In 1920s London. Kate Nason Was Born In Kingstown. Her Father Was A Doctor As Was Her Husband Who Abandoned Her After Eight Children. She Became A London Club Hostess And Proprietor Of The Notorious '43 Club' At 43 Gerrard Street Soho London (an Address Also Once The Home Of Poet John Dryden). She Went To Prison On Five Occasions And Was Sentenced To 15 Months In 1926 For Bribing A Police Officer George Goddard. Kate Meyrick (1875oo1933) Was An Irish Night Club Owner In 1920s London. Kate Nason Was Born In Kingstown. Her Father Was A Doctor As Was Her Husband Who Abandoned Her After Eight Children. She Became A London Club Hostess And Proprietor Of The Notor]
Image Credit: Metro [Mandatory Credit: Photo by Russell/ANL/REX/Shutterstock (2993897a) Kate Meyrick (1875oo1933) Was An Irish Night Club Owner In 1920s London. Kate Nason Was Born In Kingstown. Her Father Was A Doctor As Was Her Husband Who Abandoned Her After Eight Children. She Became A London Club Hostess And Proprietor Of The Notorious '43 Club' At 43 Gerrard Street Soho London (an Address Also Once The Home Of Poet John Dryden). She Went To Prison On Five Occasions And Was Sentenced To 15 Months In 1926 For Bribing A Police Officer George Goddard. Kate Meyrick (1875oo1933) Was An Irish Night Club Owner In 1920s London. Kate Nason Was Born In Kingstown. Her Father Was A Doctor As Was Her Husband Who Abandoned Her After Eight Children. She Became A London Club Hostess And Proprietor Of The Notor]

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video. Up Next. However, after Netflix found itself facing a multi-million-dollar lawsuit for saying its break-out 2024 series Baby Reindeer was ‘a true story’ at the start of each episode, the national broadcaster is reportedly being careful in how it sells the show. Despite Kate’s story being very similar to that of Meyrick, who owned several nightclubs in London in the 1920s, earned around £17 million in today’s money and was sent to prison five times, the BBC has downplayed any connection.

‘The Beeb hasn’t mentioned Meyrick in any of its publicity, even though it’s pretty obvious that the two Kate’s stories are remarkably similar,’ a source told The Sun. ‘The fear is that if they state it was based on a true story, people could come forward to criticise their portrayal in a show which is packed with potentially controversial scenes of sex, violence and drugs. ‘Kate died in 1933 so couldn’t take legal action, but executives are reluctant to be seen as playing fast and loose with the truth in dramas based on real-life events.’.

In a statement to Metro, a BBC spokesperson said that the character ‘was not Kate Meyrick’. ‘Dope Girls is inspired by a forgotten time in history and all its events and characters are fictional,’ they added. When the show, which also stars Eliza Scanlen and Umi Myers, was first reported to be in development, an insider told The Sun that Meyrick’s story ‘isn’t well known and deserves to be in the spotlight’.

During her career, Meyrick became known as “the most dangerous woman in London” and “The Nightclub Queen” after she built an illicit empire of clubs around the capital where hedonists indulged in the booming recreational drugs market. Dope Girls will air on the BBC soon. Got a story?. If you’ve got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the Metro.co.uk entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@metro.co.uk, calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we’d love to hear from you.

What I Own: I quit London at 48 and bought my first home in Sussex for £325,000. I bought a house with my partner — but when we broke up, he refused to sell. I build 20ft tiny homes for homeless people (and they only cost £12,000). London's cheapest place to rent revealed — but it might not be for long. Londoners are flocking to this ‘bustling’ neighbourhood 10 miles from the centre. Arrow MORE: Eurovision 2025 UK entry ‘revealed to be The Voice UK singers’.

Share:

More for You

Top Followed