Emmerdale is to air a special episode that showcases two different viewpoints of the same dinner party amid an ongoing storyline about domestic abuse.
In the episode, airing on Tuesday 7 May, viewers will watch Tom King (James Chase) and his wife Belle (Eden Taylor-Draper) host a dramatic dinner party that ends with the guests leaving after married couple Rhona Goskirk (Zoe Henry) and Marlon Dingle (Mark Charnock) have a fight.
The first half of the special will focus around the perspectives of Rhona and Marlon while the second part of the episode will rewind to the start of the dinner party to capture the events from Belle and Tom's point of view, offering a glimpse into Tom's controlling behaviour.
Emmerdale star Mark Charnock said: "It's a one-off in terms of structure and it's a very different sort of episode, where you kind of go back and forth in time during the dinner party.
"What it's [sic] really cleverly done is it's got what's happening on stage, which is the dinner party, and what's happening off stage, which is in the kitchen between Tom and Belle.
"So we see two charming hosts hosting these different couples - and then when the hosts go back into the kitchen we see the darkness of what's going on between them. Meanwhile, on stage you've got these happy couples - Mandy and Paddy and Vanessa and Suzy.
"And then there's Rhona and Marlon, who appear to be completely falling apart in front of everybody."
In the episode, Tom invites his colleagues to dinner after messing up at work.
During the dinner party, he becomes critical of Belle and asks her to change while Marlon and Rhona have a fight that leads to the guests making excuses to leave.
After Belle fails in her attempts to get the guests to stay, viewers see the reality of her life at home with Tom.
Speaking about public reaction to the Tom and Belle storyline, Emmerdale star Eden Taylor-Draper said: "People have reached out, which I think is a great sign that everything is resonating in some way.
"So many people go through this and I'm really grateful that I've been able to play out Belle's story.
"We've worked with charities and people that have gone through this and it's important that what we're portraying is real."
Emmerdale producer Laura Shaw said: "The dinner party episode puts a sharp lens on the relationships of the gathered people and gives the audience a unique view into their lives.
"Stepping away from the usual Emmerdale format, it offers our viewers the chance to see how some relationships, like Rhona and Marlon's, can very publicly unravel and fall apart, whereas other relationships, like Tom and Belle's, can present in public as perfect and behind closed doors tell a very different, much darker story."
Emmerdale has worked with the UK domestic abuse organisation Refuge for the Tom and Belle storyline.
Emmerdale airs weekday nights on Virgin Media One and ITV.
If you have been affected by issues raised in this story, please visit: www.rte.ie/helplines.
Source: Press Association
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