- Music
- 29 Aug 16
Derry Girls is the brainchild of Stroke City native Lisa McGee
Channel 4 have commissioned a sitcom set in Derry in the run-up to the Good Friday agreement.
Written by Lisa McGee of Indian Summers, London Irish and Being Human renown, Derry Girls is described as “a warm, funny and honest look at the lives of ordinary people living under the spectre of the Troubles, all seen through the eyes of a local teenager.”
Continues the blurb: “It’s 1994 - a time when nobody can seem to agree on anything, except how much they all enjoy using an acronym (The IRA, The UDA, The RUC). Armed police in armoured Land Rovers, British Army checkpoints and ‘peace’ walls are all an everyday reality for 16-year old Erin and her friends.
“But, despite all that, Erin has other things to worry about, like the fact the boy she's in love with (actually in LOVE with), doesn’t know she exists. Or that her family make her include her weirdo cousin in EVERYTHING she does. Or that her Head of English Sister Michael refuses to acknowledge Erin is a literary genius. Or that a four-foot tall, 11-year-old girl has started bullying her. Or that one of her calves is definitely bigger than the other, and her mother is refusing to pay for surgery, even though she's basically deformed. Or the fact that her second best friend has ALMOST had sex and she's never even kissed someone yet. These are her troubles.”
A Stroke City native herself, McGee reflects: “Anything set during the Troubles tends to be a bit grim and bleak, but that just wasn't my experience of Derry as a child and a teenager, it was a joyful place. I'd like to celebrate that. It was also hugely matriarchal, so I was keen we have a large and varied cast of female characters. There were other things going on in Northern Ireland at that time, there were other stories, I'm excited to have the opportunity to tell some of them."