Pop Culture Happy Hour - Bad Sisters
Episode Date: December 18, 2024We first met the Garvey sisters two years ago when the Apple TV+ series Bad Sisters made its debut. The show follows four sisters in Ireland who are hell bent on murdering the husband of the fifth sis...ter. Now, the series is in its second season, with more banter, wickedness and secrets. Today we're bringing you an episode of the NPR's podcast Consider This, where host Mary Louise Kelly caught up with creator and star Sharon Horgan to talk all about the new season.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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If you like a hefty dose of black comedy, may I invite you to catch up with the Garby Sisters.
Where the hell's Becca?
We met them two years ago when the TV show Bad Sisters made its debut.
It revolved around the antics of four sisters in Ireland who are hell-bent on murdering the husband of the fifth sister.
Believe me when I tell you, he had it coming.
There's all kinds of ways people can die by accidents, all kinds of unfortunate mishaps.
I was thinking something at work in an industrial accident.
To work in an open plan architectural firm.
What am I going to do?
Paper cutting to deck.
The roof terrace, the fire escape.
Yeah, we're not doing anything like that.
We're doing it again.
We're doing it a bit of coisonless timing.
Like normal women.
These scheming sisters you've just heard are BB Garvey, played by Sarah Green,
and Eva Garvey played by Sharon Horgan.
Horgan is also the creator of Bad Sisters.
Two years ago, she talked to all things considered host Mary Louise Kelly
about the process of deciding how to end the show
and what she wanted viewers to take away.
Do you know, I just really wanted them to feel it.
I wanted it to take them on a sort of roller coaster,
and I wanted to emotionally sort of ring it out of an audience.
I wanted there, of course, to be a surprise.
Yeah, I wanted it all.
Actually, it was very greedy.
I wanted everything.
Everything and then some,
because as it turns out, bad sisters did not end there.
The Garvey Sisters are back with season two,
with more banter, wickedness, and secrets.
So today we're bringing you an episode of the NPR podcast, Consider This.
Mary Louise Kelly caught up with creator and star Sharon Hogan.
They talked all about the new season.
It's Consider This from NPR.
The Apple TV series Bad Sisters debuted two years ago.
There were laughs.
There was murder.
And that could have been it for the Garvey Sisters because the show was not originally intended to have a second season.
But as creator and star Sharon Hogan puts it, you don't just kill a man and move on.
Sharon Hogan, welcome.
Hi.
Thanks for having me.
Set the stage for us for what is happening with the Garvey Sisters as the second season takes off.
We're focused on Grace.
She is the sister whose husband did indeed die in the first season.
He did die.
That's putting it very politely.
Thank you.
Yeah, it's two years on from that.
and, you know, we join the sisters when they are getting on with their lives as best they can,
but the sort of aftershock of what happened is still very much with them.
Grace is getting married and...
Yeah, she's found new love.
She looks so beautiful.
She has found new love.
She's happy.
She's happy.
You give it like 10 minutes for it all falls apart.
Well, that's it.
We kind of concocted a group of things to happen that would sort of provide the perfect storm
for someone who's so fragile and vulnerable anyway.
I mean, we left the first season with her sort of jumping into the water
and she's sort of found her freedom and moved on.
But like I said, you don't really.
And it was a lovely sort of fairy tale ending,
but at the same time, life isn't like that.
And I'm just delighted we got a chance to, you know, go further with this story.
It's about this, you know, sisterhood that comes together.
and sort of battles to protect each other.
What you just described, the bond among these sisters.
It is the organizing force of the show.
And yet, another thing you do in this new season is introduce the notion that they are quite sure if they can trust each other.
At one point, one of the sisters, Beebe, says, I'm thinking things.
I don't want to be thinking about my sister.
What was that like to write? Tell me.
Well, I mean, it was really interesting, actually.
And it was something that when we were mid-production on the first season,
we realized, you know, could be something kind of tantalizing in a way.
The sort of isolation that someone like Grace finds herself in.
And so we felt that there was a huge amount of secrets there that we could explore
and sort of blow open.
But the idea of them sort of questioning Grace and her actions,
It was an absolutely horrible thing, actually.
It was horrible to write and sort of upsetting.
And the scene when Grace sort of realizes that that's what they're saying
because she has held things too close to her chest
and because she hasn't let them in,
it just felt like a dangerous but very interesting,
deep area to explore.
You introduce a new character in this season,
a nosy, sneaky, busy body named Angelica,
played by the great Fiona.
Shaw. What's she bringing to the show? Oh my God. What isn't she bringing? She is a delight.
We're all obsessed with her. You know, I wanted to introduce someone who sort of begins to upturn the
apple cart and someone who's just slightly generationally removed. And also geographically,
she's a Northern Irish woman. And I think, you know, for a woman of her generation at that time,
in that part of Ireland,
it was kind of more difficult to have a career
or to have independence
and she's sort of limited in a lot of ways.
And, you know, it was very interesting
to have a character like that,
sort of look at the Garvey's with their freedom,
with their bodies and with their, you know,
their language and sort of think that can't be right.
But also someone who's just like looking for human connection,
you know, so she's a massive contradiction.
She's a hurt person who,
who wants to hurt.
She's just the definition of passive-aggressive and up in your business.
Yeah.
Yes.
Handing you a chocolate while stabbing you in the back.
That's it.
Patting you on your head and giving you a biscuit while ruining your life.
No, she was an absolute joy.
I mean, I can't tell you, there was times when she would do a take and we would just
break into applause because we were, you know, so riveted to everything she did.
She was an absolute joy.
It's fair to say this season is really dark.
Characters die who I really didn't want to die.
But there were moments many when I was laughing out loud.
There's one where your character, Eva, introduces her menopause coach.
How are you blessed to know this family, I mean?
Through Eva, we've been working together.
I'm her menopause coach.
Menopause coach.
Is that real?
Like, is that a thing?
Is that real?
People are so obsessed with this.
It makes me laugh.
You know, a lot of me went into Eva this time round.
Like myself at that particular time, she starts getting fit.
She decides to throw a bit of her disposable income at like sorting her hormones out.
And I had started, you know, seeing a lady online.
Not what I would call a menopause coach, but they do exist.
And, you know, I thought I need to get Eva in this great place for, or at least a place of, you know,
know, improvement and working her life out and...
Looking after herself, yeah.
Exactly, before I absolutely ruin her life.
That's to give you an excuse to get a trainer in real life, I guess.
Well, there you go.
Yeah.
Did it feel risky, though?
Menopause humor?
Did you worry whether anyone besides, I don't know, me, fellow middle-aged woman,
whether we would laugh?
No, not at all.
I didn't really.
And in fact, I think if you think too deeply about what
specific audience members are going to be liking or dislike,
and then you're sort of, you're heading for a fall kind of thing.
You know, you have to write what's interesting to you
and what you hope is going to appeal,
but at the same time, it just has to always be about the story
and it has to be about the characters.
That's such good advice for so many things.
Like, you can't worry about whether this is going to be a crowd pleaser or not.
If I find this funny, the rest of you should get on board.
Well, that's it, you know.
I mean, saying that, I felt a responsibility because people,
were so lovely about the first season
and particularly women getting in touch
and women who've been in those terrible relationships
and felt seen,
I didn't want to mess it up.
Then that's down to me to just, you know, work hard
to make sure the story goes places
that is both, you know, unexpected
but also truthful, you know.
So that's all I can do
and then cross my fingers.
Cross everything.
Cross everything.
Thank you so much. This has been an absolute delight.
Oh, thank you so much for having me.
Sharon Horgan. She is the creator and star of Bad Sisters, which you can find on Apple TV Plus.
This episode was produced by Catherine Fink. It was edited by Sarah Handel and Courtney Dorney.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
Thanks to our Consider This Plus listeners who support the work of NPR journalists and help keep public radio
Strong. Supporters also hear every episode without messages from sponsors. You can learn more at
plus.npr.org. It's considered this from NPR. I'm Mary Louise Kelly.
