Baby Reindeer 's Alleged Stalker Fiona Harvey Shares Her Truth

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Originally appeared on E! Online

"Martha" is telling her side of the story.

After writer/actor Richard Gadd shared his "true story" of being stalked by an older woman on the Netflix series Baby Reindeer, the woman who allegedly inspired the character Martha has come forward to share her truth.

Fiona Harvey denied that she was obsessed Gadd, saying the only "true facts" of the show are that she met him while he was working as a bartender at The Hawley Arms in London.

"He didn't offer me a cup of tea. Nobody gets anything free from The Hawley Arms," she said on a Piers Morgan Uncensored interview that aired May 9. "I was in for a meal with a drink of lemonade and I was very, very hungry. I'm diabetic, so very hungry."

According to the 58-year-old, Gadd interrupted her conversation with another barman. "It's pretty rude to interrupt," she said, "so he seemed to be obsessed with me from that moment onward."

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Harvey said she met Gadd just two or three times and only knew him for "two or three months" over 10 years ago.

And although Baby Reindeer states that Martha, a former lawyer, sent bartender Donny (played by Gadd) 41,000 emails and 350 voicemails, Harvey called that "completely incorrect" when it comes to her experience with the comedian.

"I don't think I sent him anything," she told Morgan at first, before confessing, "May have been a couple of emails, just jokey banter emails. That was it."

Fiona Harvey, Baby Reindeer
Twitter/X

The Scotland native then admitted to sending him about 18 tweets, 10 emails and one written letter.

She also revealed that she did indeed have a reindeer toy growing up, which she had mentioned to Gadd—a reference that she said "inadvertently" inspired the name of the Netflix show.

"I had a toy reindeer and he'd shaved his head, that bit is true, and there were reindeers in the shops," she shared. "It was Christmastime or something. It was a joke."

Harvey—who said she has a law degree from University of Aberdeen—also confirmed that they had a conversation about hanging curtains as a "sexual innuendo," which is depicted in one scene.

"He asked me to sleep with him. He said, 'Would I like my curtains fixed," she alleged. "And I laughed and he said, ‘That's a euphemism. Do you want me to come home with you?' I said, ‘I've got a boyfriend.' I gave him the brush off."

Baby Reindeer, Netflix
Ed Miller/Netflix

But as for the Baby Reindeer plot lines that Harvey says were made up? She said she never contacted Gadd's parents and she never caught him looking in her windows or at her house. Plus, she said she never heckled him at his comedy shows—though she admitted to attending one.

Crucially, Harvey said that, unlike Martha, she has never been charged with a crime and has never been to jail or prison.

"That's completely false," she said of a court scene in which Martha pleads guilty. "Very defamatory to me, very career damaging."

Harvey—who said she's been in a relationship with a lawyer for the past five years—is ultimately accusing Netflix and Gadd of defamation and said she'll be taking legal action against them. She stated she was never contacted about the show and was "shocked" to first learn of Gadd's 2019 stage play Baby Reindeer and subsequent TV show last month.

"I think they're milking it for all it's worth," she said. "I think he's psychotic and I think that anyone going along, being in that play and doing this to somebody, I find the behavior outrageous."

And based on her alleged experience with the creator, she noted, "I got the impression he was all out for himself that he wanted to sort of control that bar, very inarticulate, very full of himself."

Fiona Harvey, Baby Reindeer
Mirrorpix / MEGA

Gadd has not confirmed who may have inspired Martha and has asked fans not to speculate who the characters are based on.

While he feels the show is "emotionally 100 percent true," he did change some details of the storyline.

"It's all borrowed from instances that happened to me and real people that I met," he told Variety in an interview published April 19. "But of course, you can't do the exact truth, for both legal and artistic reasons. I mean there's certain protections, you can't just copy somebody else's life and name and put it onto television. And obviously, we were very aware that some characters in it are vulnerable people, so you don't want to make their lives more difficult."

However, fans uncovered Harvey's 2014 tweets in which she told Gadd, "my curtains need hung badly" and said he had a "fantastic ass." Harvey told Morgan those were jokes.

E! News has reached out to Netflix and Gadd for comment on her interview but hasn't heard back.

Read on for everything to know about Baby Reindeer:

Richard Gadd Takes the Stage

<p>Richard Gadd Takes the Stage</p>


Animal Instincts

<p>Animal Instincts</p>


<p>Gadd <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2016/aug/22/richard-gadd-edinburgh-festival-fringe-comedy" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:told the publication;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">told the publication</a>, "I am a completely different person than I was. It changes your life. After it happened, I lost control of myself." Afraid of how those close to him would react, he didn't say anything for a long time, let alone tell the police.</p> <p>"I was always worried what people would think and that they would judge—but nobody gave a s--t," Gadd said. "I mean, they cared, but they didn't think less of me for it." And once he had told pretty much everyone who mattered to him, it was time to "let it all out."</p>


Monkey Sees Major Success

<p><em>Monkey</em> Sees Major Success</p>


<p>Gadd shared that he was prone to anxiety and manic depression, but had been through extensive therapy and was sober, practicing meditation and in the best physical shape of his life. (He started running long distances so that he'd fall asleep easier, too tired to think, and he wanted to incorporate that essential ritual into his show.)</p> <p>"I always thought I'd tell this story once I had an audience that was going to listen," he said. "But I didn't feel like I could rush the healing process. I had to wait. There's a few nerves and wondering, 'Is this too soon?' But it will hopefully be a good thing."</p> <p>Audiences came in droves and Gadd spent months performing <em>Monkey See Monkey Do </em>around the U.K.</p> <p>"I didn't want another miserable year," he <a href="https://www.chortle.co.uk/news/2016/11/02/26128/gadd-almighty" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:told The List;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">told The List</a> toward the end of 2016, "so I wanted to combine the personal goals of trying to find inner peace with the professional goal of getting people to listen to what I have to say."</p>


Harnessing Baby Reindeer

<p>Harnessing <em>Baby Reindeer</em></p>


<p>Included in his show's signature multimedia set-up were projected scrolls of Martha's emails (she sent him 41,071 over three years, he said) and samplings of 350 hours' worth of voicemails, as well as testimonials from his parents and other witnesses describing the toll Martha's misguided affections took on all of their lives.</p> <p>The horror of the situation intensifies when Gadd describes how almost impossible it was to get police to take action, not until after he'd gone through every message she'd ever sent to find the stalking needle in the just-reaching-out haystack.</p>


An Unexpected Sequel

<p>An Unexpected Sequel</p>


<p>"I hadn't quite grasped it yet," Gadd told the <em>Guardian</em>. "If I'd rushed it a year ago, it would have just been a victim narrative. And everyone would have come out saying, 'Oh, you're so brave, and well done for doing this.'"</p> <p>Moreover, he added, "It would be unfair to say she was an awful person and I was a victim. That didn't feel true."</p>


Empathy for Martha

<p>Empathy for Martha</p>


<p>As for how much of Baby Reindeer actually happened, Gadd told <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2019/sep/10/richard-gadd-stalker-baby-reindeer" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:the Guardian;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">the <em>Guardian</em></a>, "The skeleton of the story is absolutely true."</p> <p>But, his theatrical account was much more dramatic than how it played out in real time.</p> <p>"The feeling you get most of all when you're getting harassed is relentless tediousness and frustration," he explained. "I didn't want the audience to feel that."</p>


Baby Reindeer Goes Global

<p><em>Baby Reindeer</em>&nbsp;Goes Global</p>


<p>When Martha—who calls him "Baby Reindeer" because he reminds her of a stuffed toy she had as a kid, with "big lips, huge eyes and the cutest wee bum"—sends Donny a friend request on Facebook, he Googles her and finds articles about her checkered past, including one headlined, "Sick stalker torments barrister's deaf child."</p> <p>He accepts her request anyway and it all devolves from there. Eventually it's revealed that, when he met Martha, Donny was just scraping by emotionally after having been drugged and sexually assaulted by an older man he'd really trusted, writer Darrien (<strong>Tom Goodman-Hill</strong>).</p> <p>According to <a href="https://www.netflix.com/tudum/top10/tv" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:Netflix;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">Netflix</a>, <em>Baby Reindeer </em>debuted at No. 5 on its list of the most-watched programming of the week with 2.6 million views, then spent the next two weeks at No. 1, amassing 22 million views and 87.4 million hours of viewing.</p>


Reindeer in the Wild

<p><em>Reindeer</em>&nbsp;in the&nbsp;Wild</p>


Pleas to Stand Down

<p>Pleas to Stand Down</p>


The Real Martha?

<p>The Real Martha?</p>


<p>Gadd did not respond to E! News' request for comment about the <em>Mail</em> article. </p> <p>But he previously said that the production took pains to mask identities. </p> <p>"It's all borrowed from instances that happened to me and real people that I met," he <a href="https://variety.com/2024/tv/global/baby-reindeer-richard-gadd-real-stalker-martha-1235976307/" rel="nofollow noopener" target="_blank" data-ylk="slk:told Variety;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas" class="link ">told <em>Variety</em></a>. "But of course, you can't do the exact truth, for both legal and artistic reasons. I mean there's certain protections, you can't just copy somebody else's life and name and put it onto television. And obviously, we were very aware that some characters in it are vulnerable people, so you don't want to make their lives more difficult."</p>


<p>And he emphasized that real-life events didn't unfold exactly as they do in <em>Baby Reindeer</em>.</p> <p>Reiterating that "a lot of stalking is quite boring," Gadd explained that "you need to move certain timelines around, you need to move certain points to the end of episodes to make them pay off a little better. As well as a true story, you have to make it visually interesting."</p> <p>But while there's a psychological thriller aspect to the narrative, he really wanted it to be "an examination of the ramifications of trauma," he said. "And I think that's quite subtle in the show, but a lot of people are really getting that aspect of it. They see Donny and they're appreciating someone's self-destructive tendencies in the wake of trauma. And I think people are finding a great comfort in that, honestly."</p>


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