Irish writer Stefanie Preissner took on the challenge of adapting bestselling author Marian Keyes’ popular novels into the BBC’s new six-part drama, The Walsh Sisters. Stefanie Preissner shared that readers form deep connections with Keyes’ books. “You’re not ambivalent about a Marian Keyes book,” she stated. “You remember the first time you read it, where you were sitting, how you felt about it, probably what you were wearing and who you were dating at the time.”
Storyline and Cast
Set in Dublin, the series tracks five sisters—Anna (Louisa Harland), Rachel (Caroline Menton), Maggie (Stefanie Preissner), Claire (Danielle Galligan), and Helen (Máiréad Tyers)—as they face the ups and downs of their 20s and 30s.
Drawing from Personal Experiences
Stefanie Preissner, a 38-year-old mother of two who also stars as Maggie, infused the characters with her own encounters with miscarriage and motherhood. The story delves into timeless issues like heartbreak, grief, and family pressures.
Fertility Struggles with Maggie
Preissner closely identifies with Maggie, who desperately tries to conceive. “Maggie and I overlap on a Venn diagram,” she explained. “I have had five miscarriages, two failed IVF attempts and, like Maggie, have had to introduce a sex schedule into my marriage in order to try and get pregnant.” She added that time spent on anonymous trying-to-conceive forums highlights a common yet unspoken challenge.
Motherhood Burdens Through Claire
The series portrays motherhood’s demands via Claire (Danielle Galligan), a single mother navigating divorce. Preissner called these expectations “absolutely barbaric.” “I think that motherhood is a relationship and fatherhood is a relationship,” she noted. “The expectation on those two things is completely not the same and it should be. It’s not fair.” She looks forward to sparking dialogue on these inequities.
Addiction and Mental Health
Caroline Menton, portraying Rachel, hopes viewers connect with her character’s addiction battle. “She struggles massively with her mental health, and I think some people are better at masking that than others,” Menton said. Addiction, she emphasized, strikes regardless of background or wealth, urging greater compassion.
The Walsh Sisters launches on BBC iPlayer at 6am on Saturday, February 21, and airs on BBC One from 9:15pm that evening.

