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    ‘All Her Fault’ First Look: Sarah Snook Makes Her Return to TV Post-‘Succession’

    It’s been over two years since “Succession” signed off, and now Sarah Snook is making her return to television. Above is a first look of her in the new Peacock drama “All Her Fault,” based on Andrea Mara’s 2021 novel of the same name. The show will premiere its first four episodes on November 6, with two episodes each dropping the following two weeks, to wrap on November 20.

    It seems like a good thing this release is compressed, because this show looks like a masterclass in anxiety. As in Mara’s novel, Snook will play Marissa, a mom who arrives to pick up her son Milo from his first-ever play date. When the door opens, the woman greeting her is not at all the mother of Milo’s friend Marissa’s expecting — and she’s never even heard of Milo at all. As the official logline reads, “And so begins every parent’s worst nightmare.”

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    Megan Gallagher of “Wolf” and “Suspicion” is writer, creator, and executive producer on “All Her Fault,” which comes from Carnival Films, the Universal Studio Group shingle behind “The Day of the Jackal” and “Lockerbie: A Search for Truth.” In addition to Snook, the cast includes Jake Lacy, Dakota Fanning, Michael Peña, Sophia Lillis, Abby Elliott, Daniel Monks, Jay Ellis, Thomas Cocquerel, Duke McCloud, and Kartiah Vergara.  

    But it’s Snook’s return to TV that “Succession” fans will particularly be excited to see. Since the HBO show went off the air in May 2023, she’s been seen on the big screen in the Sundance Midnight section thriller “Run Rabbit Run” and in “The Beanie Bubble,” the 2023 film about the ’90s Beanie Babies craze. She also voiced Grace Pudel in the acclaimed animated film “Memoir of a Snail.”

    Her most distinguished post-“Succession” role, however, was on the stage. Starting on the West End in 2024 and then moving to Broadway this year, Snook starred in Australian writer Kip Williams’ take on Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray,” playing a whopping 26 characters, including the title role. She won the Tony for Best Actress in a Play as a result.

    Now, fans of her extraordinary small screen work only have to wait a few more months before she puts us all through the wringer with “All Her Fault.”

    “All Her Fault” premieres Thursday, November 6 on Peacock.

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