Sharon Horgan Was an 'Incredibly Pretentious' Kid on a 'Turkey Farm' in Ireland. Now She's at the Top of Her Game (Exclusive)

Mar. 15, 2025

Sharon Horgan in Bad Sisters

Sharon Horganalways had success on her bucket list.

When she was younger, the London-born, Irish-raised star, 54, told her mother she was going to win an Oscar one day. “I think I was incredibly pretentious, which is hilarious for a kid on a turkey farm,” theBad Sisterscreator tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.

“I remember my mom being like, ‘Yeah, maybe don’t aim that high.’ She wasn’t saying you can’t do it, because, I mean, my parents — they would push us to be the best we could be and to work hard. But I think there was always an element of, ‘Be practical. How are you going to earn a living?'”

The three-time Emmy nominee first explored writing through poetry and monologues and she began to dream of going to drama school. That didn’t quite pan out, and when she found herself not “getting parts that I thought were interesting and fun and funny,” she picked up every odd job from selling bongs to waitressing, which “pushed things a bit further down the line” in terms of her pursing writing.

Eva Birthistle, Sharon Horgan, Sarah Greene and Eve Hewson in “Bad Sisters,” now streaming on Apple TV+.

“I suppose the whole thing seems a bit fanciful, a bit of a dream,” she says. “I think when you were brought up in the middle of nowhere, at a certain point, it feels a bit crazy to have aspirations that feel way beyond what you see around you.”

For more on Sharon Horgan, pick up this week’s issue of PEOPLE, on newsstands Friday.

Sharon Horgan on Bad Sisters

It’s somewhat a full circle moment for Horgan, who stars in the show alongsideEve Hewson,Sarah Greene,Anne-Marie Duffand Eva Birthistle, who play Irish sisters living in Dublin.

“For me, the modern Ireland — how I see the country and how relevant it was to the story — but also how complex and interesting and how beautiful it is, and how it gets under our skin and dominates our personalities and how large families are… All of it, I think, fed into the show,” she says of season 2, which picks up two years after the death of the Garvey sisters’ abusive brother-in-law.

“And if I hadn’t got it right — if I hadn’t represented Ireland and the Irish people accurately, or in a way that made them proud — I’d throw in the towel.”

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source: people.com