Succession fan favourite Sarah Snook is set to star in a new TV series.
The 36-year-old Emmy award winner will play the lead role in an upcoming crime thriller based on the bestselling 2021 novel All Her Fault by Andrea Mara.
Sarah will appear as a young mother searching for her missing son in the show which will be produced by U.S. streaming service Peacock.
No Australian platform or broadcaster have been linked to the series yet.
This will be Sarah’s first major series since her career-making turn as Shiv Roy in HBO‘s blockbuster drama Succession.
Succession fan favourite Sarah Snook is set to star in a new TV series based on the bestselling 2021 novel All Her Fault by Irish author Andrea Mara reported Variety on Tuesday. Pictured: Sarah, 36, accepting the Best Actress at the Olivier Awards in London in April
Industry paper Variety reports that Sarah also serve as an executive producer on All Her Fault.
Plot details released on Tuesday reveal that Sarah will play a mother called Marissa.
The character’s life is turned up side one day when she goes to pick up her young son Milo from a play date with a friend from his new school.
Sarah will appear as a young mother searching for her missing son in the upcoming series which will be produced by U.S. streaming service Peacock. Pictured: Sarah accepting her Emmy for Best Actress for her role as Shiv Roy in Succession
Marissa’s nightmare begins when she arrives at the address of her son’s friend to find a strange woman.
The woman tells Marissa that she has never heard of either boy. It quickly emerges that Marissa’s son Milo has been kidnapped.
Adelaide-born Sarah rose to fame in Succession which ran from 2018 until 2023.
This will be Sarah’s first major series since her career making turn as the Shiv Roy character in HBO ‘s blockbuster drama Succession. Pictured: The cover for the All Her Fault bestseller
Her part in the critically acclaimed hit series won the red-headed beauty a raft of best actress prizes including an Emmy and two Golden Globes.
Earlier this year Sarah won the best actress Olivier Award for her one-woman performance of Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray which was a hit in London’s West End.
In her acceptance speech, the mother-of-one said breastfeeding her daughter in the middle of the night gave her the window to learn the 60,000 words of the Oscar Wilde monologue which won her British theatre’s biggest award.
Sarah’s part in the critically acclaimed hit series Succession won the red-headed beauty a raft of best actress prizes including an Emmy and two Golden Globes.
‘I just felt, “What am I doing? Why am I doing a 60,000 word monologue with an eight-month-old baby?” I felt so stupid,’ she admitted.
‘So I was doing a lot of night breastfeeding. And in the evening when I would wake up then, rather than being on my phone, and feeding her I would run over the lines.’
‘I find that if you learn your lines at night and then sleep on them they do go in more effectively.’
Sarah went head-to-head for the gong with fellow TV star Sarah Jessica Parker, 59, of Sex And The City as well as Sheridan Smith, 42, Sophie Okonedo, 55, and Laura Donnelly, 41.
Sarah welcomed her first child, a daughter, with husband, Australian comedian Dave Lawson last May.