In Lisa McGee’s show “Derry Girls,” about a group of teen-agers growing up in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, the threat of violence—in the form of car bombings and street riots—was portrayed as ...
SPOILER ALERT: This story contains spoilers from “How to Get to Heaven From Belfast,” now streaming on Netflix. It starts, as so many things in Irish life do, with a wake. Lisa McGee had wanted to ...
Netflix's How To Get To Heaven From Belfast is the new series from the creator of the beloved show Derry Girls. It follows three very messy longtime friends working together to solve a mystery from ...
At first, How to Get to Heaven from Belfast looks like a grief story: three estranged friends reunite for the funeral of a fourth. But it quickly pivots into a disappearance mystery, and then ...
The drama follows three childhood friends — Robyn (Sinéad Keenan), Saoirse (Roísín Gallagher) and Dara (Caoilfhionn Dunne) — as they investigate the shocking death of Greta (Natasha O’Keeffe), an ...
Research biologists with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers discovered 26 new microbial species that could aid in developing new technologies that help the U.S. military survive and thrive in extreme ...
Miller Reynolds is a Journalist and Writer with a strong passion for gaming and writing news. Awarded the Excellence in Writing and Production Award while attending Loyalist College, Miller is ...
The missing fourth member of this quartet is Greta (Natasha O’Keeffe), who the other three lost touch with after one fateful night 20 years in the past. In the present, when Greta abruptly dies after ...
How to Get to Heaven from Belfast is “wish fulfilment” for creator Lisa McGee. “I’d love to go on one of these adventures with my friends,” McGee told Deadline at London’s Langham Hotel a day before ...
Sinead Keenan, Caoilfhionn Dunne and Roisin Gallagher play friends who begin to suspect something is suspicious about an old chum's death. By Daniel Fienberg Chief Television Critic It’s a good time ...
Lisa McGee said she had envisaged her new show, “How to Get to Heaven From Belfast,” as a sort of modern, funny “Murder, She Wrote.” Just don’t expect tired Irish stereotypes. By Ali Watkins Reporting ...