|
Top Running Shows
Stranger Things The Mandalorian The Witcher The Boys House of the Dragon The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power Loki The Flash The Blacklist The Last of Us The Handmaid's Tale Grey's Anatomy The Umbrella Academy Rick and Morty Star Trek: Discovery The Good Doctor Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan Star Trek: Picard Black Mirror Yellowstone Ted Lasso Manifest Andor The Orville Young Sheldon The Wheel of Time Fear the Walking Dead You Billions The Rookie True Detective Fargo Titans Foundation Superman & Lois The Crown Outlander 9-1-1 Reacher South Park Sex Education Halo Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Squid Game Peacemaker (2022) Wednesday American Horror Story Family Guy Succession Chicago Fire
|
Saoirse-Monica Jackson
United Kingdom
Age: 30
Born: 24 Nov, 1993
TV Series Starring Saoirse-Monica Jackson
The Doll Factory
Set in London in 1850, The Doll Factory tells the story of Iris, who paints dolls for a living alongside her twin sister, Rose, and dreams of becoming an artist and by night secretly paints herself naked. Silas is a taxidermist who owns a shop filled with his creations. He dreams of one day finding an item so unique he will be catapulted to fame. Louis is a painter and member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, searching for his next muse. When Iris meets Silas, and then Louis, she is offered an opportunity to escape and start a new life. To do so, she must abandon her sister, sacrifice her reputation, and launch herself into the unknown. But as Iris' world expands, a story of dark obsession begins to unfold.
Derry Girls
Derry Girls is a sitcom set in the early 1990s during the Troubles, featuring the personal exploits of a 16 year old girl, her family and friends.
The show follows the everyday lives of a group of teenagers growing up in Derry, Northern Ireland, against the backdrop of the political conflict and sectarian violence that defined the era.
Broken (BBC)
A primetime Liverpool-based drama series from Jimmy McGovern. Broken is described as a "state of the nation piece".It plots the perspective of a local catholic priest Father Michael Kerrigan and that of his congregation and their struggle with both Catholicism and contemporary Britain".
|
| |
|