Queer British Teen Dramedy “In My Skin” Hits Hard on Class and Mental Illness, Misses on Race

Halfway through Kayleigh Llewellyn‘s In My Skin, our protagonist Bethan finds herself talking to her lesbian gym teacher. “If you are struggling with your sexuality, it’ll fall into place,” the teacher offers in comfort.

She can tell Bethan is having a hard time — cutting class, talking back, making some poor make up choices. She assumes, based on the chatter of school bullies, that Bethan is just a young and angry queer. And she’s right. Bethan is a young and angry queer. But Bethan isn’t struggling with her sexuality. It’s everything else that’s the problem.

Bethan is a Welsh 16-year-old trying as hard as possible to make it through each day. Her mom has bipolar one and her dad oscillates between neglect and abuse. The care of Bethan’s mom is on Bethan and as if that weren’t difficult enough she’s also committed to keeping it all a secret. She casually lies to teachers, her crush, and even her closest friends about her home life crafting her vision of a perfect upper middle class existence.

Gabrielle Creevy as Bethan Gwyndaf and Jo Hartley as Katrina Gwyndaf.

This is a difficult show. But what separates it from other difficult queer narratives is that Bethan’s queerness isn’t a point of trauma, but her escape. When the show is at its best it presents a crush, a flirt, a kiss as a point of joy amidst all the suffering. After a century of queer trauma on screen, many audiences are hungry for happiness, but that’s not the only way to subvert the usual narrative. Queer people — being people, after all — experience all sorts of painful experiences separate from our queerness and we deserve to see that on screen too.

Bethan lies in bed with her crush — overwhelmed, confused, excited. But she’s not allowed the usual ease of queer adolescent anxiety. Her biggest fear is not that her crush won’t like her back — or that she will — but rather that her mom isn’t safe home alone with her dad. When is she allowed to just be a teenager? When is she allowed to indulge in her own desires? What’s it like to be a teenager who is forced to parent your parents?

Gabrielle Creevy is remarkable as Bethan. She’s funny and charming and feels grounded in a teen angst that has to deal with so much more. There’s never a doubt about why Bethan doesn’t ask for help because Creevy expresses her defenses and her shame with such depth. Her performance also regularly adds brevity to the series which keeps it watchable and makes the harsher moments all the more heartbreaking.

In My Skin’s successes make its missteps all the more frustrating — primarily the show’s treatment of Bethan’s crush, Poppy (Zadeiah Campbell-Davies). We’re first introduced to Poppy as she leads a crew of mean girls and Bethan’s best friend calls her a cunt. Poppy’s initial interest in Bethan seems motivated only by Bethan winning the school poetry contest and the accompanying clout Bethan receives. Anyone with any knowledge of being a queer teenager or watching queer coming-of-age stories will cringe as Bethan seemingly falls for this straight popular girl.

But then there’s a shift. Maybe Campbell-Davies gives too layered of a performance or the actresses have too much chemistry or I simply wanted the show to be something it isn’t. But I found myself interested in Poppy and her own confused queerness. I found myself wanting this bright spot in a dark show to be granted the complexity it deserved. It’s not a matter of Bethan and Poppy having a happily-ever-after — they’re teenagers — but simply living in the mess of two closeted teenagers with very different backgrounds finding some sort of connection.

Zadeiah Campbell-Davies as Poppy and Gabrielle Creevy as Bethan Gwyndaf.

Instead the show shifts once again and puts Poppy back into her role as archetype. It’s frustrating as it hollows the narrative of the show and it’s frustrating because it plays into the trope of so many white teen movies and shows that make the only girls of color the villains. Bethan is white. Her friends are white. Poppy is not and one of her two friends is not.

Poppy should have been given the space to be three-dimensional, because dimensionality for all characters will always make for a better series. But given the casting, this goes beyond the disappointment of an underwritten character. It’s incredibly frustrating that a show this smart about class could be this thoughtless about race.

In My Skin is based on show creator Kayleigh Llewellyn’s own experience with a mother with bipolar one. The texture of lived experience is felt in their interactions. My favorite moment in the series is when Bethan shaves her mother’s legs after she gets home from one of her hospital stays. It’s tender and melancholy and, most importantly, specific. Llewellyn has created a series grounded in her complicated love for her mother, growing up in a low-income household, and, of course, her queerness. Ultimately the show is proof that writing from a place of lived experience will always result in the sharpest stories — that’s as evident in its failures as it is in its successes.


In My Skin premieres on Hulu on July 30th. 

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Drew Burnett Gregory

Drew is a Brooklyn-based writer, filmmaker, and theatremaker. She is a Senior Editor at Autostraddle with a focus in film and television, sex and dating, and politics. Her writing can also be found at Bright Wall/Dark Room, Cosmopolitan UK, Refinery29, Into, them, and Knock LA. She was a 2022 Outfest Screenwriting Lab Notable Writer and a 2023 Lambda Literary Screenwriting Fellow. She is currently working on a million film and TV projects mostly about queer trans women. Find her on Twitter and Instagram.

Drew Burnett has written 619 articles for us.

8 Comments

  1. there is so much interesting commentary here (as always, thank you Drew!) but i am honestly in love with the idea that winning a poetry competition gives you social clout in high school

    • Right?? I’m sort of obsessed with that plot point. It’s part of why I thought Poppy could’ve been more than the textbook mean girl! She’s impressed by poetry! Seems pretty gay to me.

  2. I think the race thing is where we’re thing to continue to have issues with British TV, because my understanding is, they tend to have a writer, rather than a writers’ room. So you only really ever get a single voice for most shows, or at best, one writer per episode. Which obvs isn’t going to end well for honestly representing diverse perspectives.

    (Source: my neighbour, a screenwriter who is honestly weirded out by the whole writers’ room concept)

    • We get into this in my interview that’s coming out tomorrow but the writer of this is also in the Killing Eve writers room which is a proper room… but it’s all-white. So I do think the issues go beyond one writer vs. a room and I think when it’s a single writer they need to be hyperaware of their own gaps.

      • Historically, the model for the prestigious TV drama on British television was “the one white guy writes the whole four/five/six-part series”, and… they haven’t moved so much from there. (Don’t get me started about the first PoC writers in “Doctor Who”). And yes, the whole industry, in general, is very much white; the people who worked in the US say it’s much worse than in the States. (Check out the recent interview with Steve McQueen in the Guardian: “It felt like I had walked out of one environment, the London I was surrounded by, into another, a place that was alien to me. I could not believe the whiteness of the set. I made three films in the States and it seems like nothing has really changed in the interim in Britain. The UK is so far behind in terms of representation, it’s shameful”).

        Can’t wait for the interview!

  3. I think the actress who plays Poppy is white. She is Welsh – and like Catherine Zeta-Jones (half Welsh, half Irish), they can sometimes be mistaken for POC.

    • Nope! Her grandmother was actually Betty Campbell, Wales’ first Black head teacher.

      • Interesting! Google doesn’t give much ethnic background.. wish she’d identify more publicly as a Black Welsh!

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