Berliner Boersenzeitung - Team behind film about world's first IVF baby hope to spread joy and debate

EUR -
AED 3.822267
AFN 72.984524
ALL 98.69765
AMD 411.661434
ANG 1.877698
AOA 949.075877
ARS 1067.449648
AUD 1.665951
AWG 1.873176
AZN 1.770326
BAM 1.959412
BBD 2.103757
BDT 124.508295
BGN 1.957563
BHD 0.392533
BIF 3080.448228
BMD 1.040653
BND 1.413979
BOB 7.214848
BRL 6.43883
BSD 1.041885
BTN 88.735703
BWP 14.410939
BYN 3.409284
BYR 20396.801032
BZD 2.095442
CAD 1.496392
CDF 2986.674497
CHF 0.935433
CLF 0.037409
CLP 1032.220856
CNY 7.595413
CNH 7.604073
COP 4589.280232
CRC 529.075182
CUC 1.040653
CUP 27.577308
CVE 110.46755
CZK 25.159839
DJF 184.945096
DKK 7.457154
DOP 63.21439
DZD 140.259234
EGP 53.154065
ERN 15.609797
ETB 132.62617
FJD 2.412337
FKP 0.824179
GBP 0.830555
GEL 2.924144
GGP 0.824179
GHS 15.315272
GIP 0.824179
GMD 74.927344
GNF 9001.50492
GTQ 8.027719
GYD 217.968141
HKD 8.085352
HNL 26.465781
HRK 7.464507
HTG 136.241117
HUF 412.369306
IDR 16872.265034
ILS 3.819421
IMP 0.824179
INR 88.573732
IQD 1364.902649
IRR 43798.503069
ISK 145.119154
JEP 0.824179
JMD 162.648227
JOD 0.737925
JPY 163.540196
KES 134.670507
KGS 90.536699
KHR 4178.52109
KMF 485.07444
KPW 936.587221
KRW 1511.60036
KWD 0.32074
KYD 0.868263
KZT 543.531829
LAK 22798.597965
LBP 93298.138047
LKR 308.508638
LRD 189.624045
LSL 19.200891
LTL 3.072778
LVL 0.62948
LYD 5.116431
MAD 10.482822
MDL 19.180524
MGA 4911.959237
MKD 61.620814
MMK 3380.00072
MNT 3536.139146
MOP 8.337948
MRU 41.489073
MUR 48.754615
MVR 16.027396
MWK 1806.695347
MXN 21.027968
MYR 4.672283
MZN 66.501615
NAD 19.200891
NGN 1611.982113
NIO 38.340669
NOK 11.823011
NPR 141.972542
NZD 1.841929
OMR 0.40067
PAB 1.041855
PEN 3.886363
PGK 4.226791
PHP 60.93011
PKR 290.305085
PLN 4.266955
PYG 8133.992435
QAR 3.798465
RON 4.977343
RSD 116.992268
RUB 105.33558
RWF 1442.969528
SAR 3.90921
SBD 8.724373
SCR 14.802889
SDG 625.952043
SEK 11.494232
SGD 1.412634
SHP 0.824179
SLE 23.730138
SLL 21821.978623
SOS 595.491878
SRD 36.550854
STD 21539.418387
SVC 9.116804
SYP 2614.672421
SZL 19.195381
THB 35.642589
TJS 11.382269
TMT 3.652692
TND 3.318316
TOP 2.437312
TRY 36.642613
TTD 7.077044
TWD 34.030188
TZS 2505.373076
UAH 43.792296
UGX 3829.020791
USD 1.040653
UYU 46.615922
UZS 13442.648082
VES 53.57528
VND 26484.621749
VUV 123.548422
WST 2.875103
XAF 657.139813
XAG 0.035134
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.812417
XDR 0.798765
XOF 657.161955
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.553507
ZAR 19.314189
ZMK 9367.128334
ZMW 28.833344
ZWL 335.089878
  • CMSC

    0.0790

    23.939

    +0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.0030

    23.557

    -0.01%

  • NGG

    0.3600

    58.86

    +0.61%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    11.68

    -0.51%

  • BTI

    -0.2000

    36.04

    -0.55%

  • JRI

    0.0140

    12.074

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    0.0100

    122.76

    +0.01%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    59.03

    +0.66%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    33.91

    +0.91%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0700

    7.2

    -0.97%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.5

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.4600

    22.7

    -2.03%

  • AZN

    0.7300

    66.08

    +1.1%

  • BP

    0.1340

    28.734

    +0.47%

  • RELX

    -0.0200

    45.45

    -0.04%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    8.35

    -0.48%

Team behind film about world's first IVF baby hope to spread joy and debate
Team behind film about world's first IVF baby hope to spread joy and debate / Photo: Adrian Dennis - AFP

Team behind film about world's first IVF baby hope to spread joy and debate

The makers of a new film about the British pioneers of IVF hope it highlights the "fragile" status of fertility treatment, with perceived threats in places like the United States and dwindling availability in the UK.

Text size:

"Joy", released Friday on Netflix, chronicles the sustained and wide-ranging opposition that a trio of UK scientists faced while pioneering the then-highly contentious in vitro fertilisation treatment in the late 1960s and '70s.

Featuring "Love Actually" star Bill Nighy, James Norton and Thomasin McKenzie, it tracks their struggles in the face of a media- and church-led backlash, which culminated in the successful 1978 birth of Louise Joy Brown.

Brown, the world's first baby born through IVF, is now 46 and told AFP she welcomes the film, which gives the trio "the recognition that they all deserve".

But despite more than 10 million IVF births since hers, the film's release comes with fertility treatment increasingly attacked by some US conservatives and legal efforts to curb its use gaining traction.

Religious and cultural conservatism in other countries, including in Europe, and stretched public healthcare finances have seen its availability increasingly limited.

For the stars and creators of "Joy", that all makes their movie set five decades ago as relevant as ever.

"We sit on the shoulders of many, many people who have given a lot and for us to be 50 years later at a place where that progress is incredibly fragile is very, very scary," Norton told AFP in a recent interview.

"That's why this film is so fortuitously important."

- 'Fear' -

Director Ben Taylor, who has two children conceived through IVF, said the filmmakers wanted "to celebrate and tell the story of the origin of this world-changing procedure" rather than focus on contemporary controversies.

"But our story is about opposition too. It's about fear. It's about ignorance and the people that were trying to get in the way of something that was only being developed purely for good, purely to give families hope," he explained.

"So if it holds up a mirror to that similar conversation now, I would hope it proves the same."

With a taut script, humour and uplifting soundtrack -- which opens with The Beatles' "Here Comes the Sun" -- "Joy" turns a potentially dry tale of scientific discovery into a funny and heartwarming story.

Its makers opted to tell it through Jean Purdy (played by McKenzie), a nurse and embryologist whose pivotal role in pioneering IVF was long overlooked.

Her name was only added to a blue plaque at the northern English hospital where the team laboured for years in 2015.

For four decades prior to that, the plaque had only honoured her male colleagues, 2010 Nobel Prize for medicine laureate Robert Edwards (Norton) and Patrick Steptoe (Nighy).

Purdy's airbrushing from recognition is what first attracted Nighy to the role.

"It was another opportunity to put a bomb under the male tendency to dismiss women's contribution to anything," he explained.

"There are many, many cases, from DNA to IVF."

- 'Personal' -

In addition to Taylor, a number of other people involved in "Joy" had direct experience of using IVF to conceive, making the filmmaking process highly emotional.

"A lot of personal experience has gone into this movie, both in the writing and the making," noted Norton. "It was evident on the page -- I cried when I read it."

Husband and wife co-writers Jack Thorne and Rachel Mason, who went through seven rounds of IVF before welcoming their son, hope the film will raise awareness about the treatment's decreasingly mass availability in Britain.

Mason said the country's cash-strapped National Health Service increasingly rations access, so it was now down to "where you live or how much money you have".

"The people that get to do IVF now are the people that can afford to do it," echoed Thorne.

"It's wrong... and hopefully this film poses the question about how we feel as a society about it."

Brown noted that that went against the ethos of the pioneering scientists' she owes her life to.

She grew up knowing the trio, likening them to "a big extended family", and forged a decades-spanning friendship with Edwards in particular.

He attended her wedding and met her own children.

"Bob, Patrick and Jean wanted it to be available for everybody -- normal, everyday, working people -- and I agree," Brown said before last month's London Film Festival premiere of "Joy".

"I think everybody should be able to have it."

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)