The series was released on BBC Three in the United Kingdom on 26 April 2020, followed by weekly airings on BBC One. It premiered on RTÉ One in Ireland on 28 April 2020. In the United States, the series was released in its entirety on Hulu on 29 April 2020. The series has received critical acclaim, with praise for the performances, directing, writing, aesthetics, and its portrayal of mature content. At the 72nd Primetime Emmy Awards, the series was nominated for four awards, including Outstanding Lead Actor for Mescal and Outstanding Directing for Abrahamson.[4]
Premise
The series follows Marianne Sheridan and Connell Waldron through their time at secondary school in County Sligo on Ireland's Atlantic coast, and later as undergraduate students at Trinity College Dublin.
The focus is mainly Connell's and Marianne's complex relationship. Among her peers at secondary school, Marianne is regarded as an oddball, but she denies caring about her social standing.
Despite her academic achievements, her home life is complicated by her dismissive mother, Denise, and her resentful brother, Alan. Her father is deceased and is later revealed to have been domestically abusive, though her family avoids mentioning him.
Connell is an athletic, high-achieving student living with his single mother, Lorraine, who is employed by Denise as a house cleaner. He is popular in school, though he remains silent while Marianne is constantly bullied. This creates complexity and points of contention as their relationship develops.
In addition to that, both characters struggle to articulate their feelings and misread each other's intentions.
[5]
Cast
Main
Daisy Edgar-Jones as Marianne Sheridan, a student from an affluent family who is studious, outspoken, and therefore disliked. She begins a relationship with Connell which she initially suggests they keep secret. She later attends Trinity College Dublin and studies history and politics. Marianne struggles with validation from her family and romantic relationships which have an impact on the way she views herself.
Paul Mescal as Connell Waldron, a well-liked, academically gifted student and athlete. His mother works as a cleaner for Marianne's family. He struggles with what he wants out of life and decides to follow Marianne's suggestion and apply to be an undergraduate at Trinity College to study English.
Sarah Greene as Lorraine Waldron,[a] Connell's single mother who is employed as the Sheridans' cleaner. She and Connell share a close relationship and she expresses disappointment when Connell chooses his public image over treating Marianne well when they are in school. Prior to Marianne and Connell's secret relationship, she is very close with Marianne.
Recurring
Aislín McGuckin as Denise Sheridan, Marianne's single, wealthy mother who is a solicitor. Marianne's father is described as being abusive towards her. She doesn't have a close relationship with Marianne and often fails to control Alan's abuse towards Marianne throughout the series.
Éanna Hardwicke as Rob Hegarty, a close friend and schoolmate of Connell.
Frank Blake as Alan Sheridan, Marianne's brother who mistreats Marianne verbally and physically.
Eliot Salt as Joanna, a close friend Marianne meets at Trinity College.
India Mullen as Peggy, a friend of Marianne at college who also comes from a wealthy background.
Desmond Eastwood as Niall, Connell's flatmate at college. He and Marianne become friends and he often encourages Connell and Marianne's relationship.
Sebastian de Souza as Gareth, Connell’s college classmate, an advocate of free speech and Marianne's early collegiate love interest.
Fionn O'Shea as Jamie, part of Marianne's social circle at Trinity College who is very competitive. He has a crush on Marianne throughout their university days.
Leah McNamara as Rachel Moran, a fellow schoolmate of Marianne and Connell's and part of Connell's social circle. She and Connell once had a casual fling, making her occasionally jealous of Marianne. Connell asks her to the Debs formal instead of Marianne.
Seán Doyle as Eric, one of Connell's school friends.
Niamh Lynch as Karen, one of the nicer girls to Marianne at school in Sligo.
Kwaku Fortune as Philip, a friend of Marianne's at college.
At a secondary school in County Sligo, rural Ireland, a friendship sparks between the popular athlete Connell and outcast Marianne, which soon ignites into an intense romance. Connell lives at home with his kind mother, and Marianne lives in a mansion with her distant, busy mother and hateful brother. Connell's mother happens to be the housekeeper at Marianne's home. Marianne confronts Connell about her feelings for him and they kiss, but he's uncertain due to social pressures and keeps their acquaintance hidden.
2
Episode 2
Lenny Abrahamson
Sally Rooney and Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
28 April 2020
Connell and Marianne's romance blossoms, but he is eager to keep their relationship a secret to protect his high social standing in school. Connell and Marianne have sex and they continue to grow closer. However, Connell continues to ignore her in school. Marianne acts as though it is fine, but it puts their delicate connection under strain. Connell and his mother are very close in contrast to the high tension between Marianne and her family, which continues to grow.
3
Episode 3
Lenny Abrahamson
Sally Rooney and Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
5 May 2020
As their school days come to a close, Marianne cuts Connell off after a hurtful betrayal. Marianne turns up to a party, surprising everyone by looking glamorous. After a hurtful encounter at the party, Connell drives her home, and they make up. Connell doesn't ask Marianne to the debs, still holding the belief that his friends would look down on him for it. His mum expresses Marianne's hurt, but Connell brushes it off. Marianne stays home on the night of the debs still feeling betrayed; during the dance, Rob tells Connell that he knows about Connell and Marianne and that their friends wouldn't have cared if Connell had told them. Later that night, Connell breaks down crying while walking alone through the streets of Sligo.
4
Episode 4
Lenny Abrahamson
Sally Rooney and Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
5 May 2020
At Trinity College, Connell is reunited with Marianne through Gareth, a classmate whom she is seeing. While Connell struggles to fit into the new environment, Marianne has made several friends, in contrast to her time in school. After meeting at a party, they decide they still want each other in their lives despite Marianne having moved on.
5
Episode 5
Lenny Abrahamson
Sally Rooney and Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
12 May 2020
As Marianne and Connell grow closer, Connell begins to spend more time with her friend group, despite not particularly fitting in with them. Connell apologizes for how he previously treated her, leading to Marianne doubting her seemingly strong relationship with Gareth. After thinking it over, she abruptly dumps him and then sleeps with Connell soon after returning from a party. However, another member of their friend group, Jamie, has his eye on Marianne.
6
Episode 6
Lenny Abrahamson
Sally Rooney and Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
12 May 2020
For a while, things are ideal and Connell and Marianne's renewed relationship blossoms due to lack of pressure for once. Marianne goes home for a family dinner, which ends in tears due to more abuse from her brother. After he loses his job, Connell can no longer pay his rent. Unable to bring himself to ask Marianne to stay at her place, he has to move back to Sligo. Their relationship comes to an abrupt end but it is not clear why.
Connell spends his days in Sligo getting drunk with old friends. Meanwhile, Jamie is finally free to make his move on Marianne and they start seeing each other. After meeting at the shop, Marianne and Connell rekindle their friendship. Marianne confesses that Jamie likes sadomasochism and claims she also likes it. Connell goes back to college for his results then goes drinking after being accepted into the prestigious Schols program along with Marianne. While celebrating with her friends and Jamie, Connell shows up bloody and drunk after being mugged. Marianne tells Connell to leave after he tells her of his new girlfriend. Connell and Marianne discuss their breakup, and they realize it was due to a misunderstanding. Connell goes home to his girlfriend, Helen.
8
Episode 8
Hettie Macdonald
Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
19 May 2020
Connell and Niall have spent the summer backpacking in Europe. They visit Marianne's summer family home in the Italian countryside, where Jamie and Peggy have also been spending time. During their evening dinner, Jamie's controlling and abusive attitudes are apparent to all and the two reach a breaking point. Marianne turns to Connell for protection and she stays in his room, where he comforts her.
9
Episode 9
Hettie Macdonald
Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
26 May 2020
Marianne is away on the Erasmus student exchange programme in Sweden where she finds herself in another unhealthy relationship with a Swedish man named Lukas. In Ireland, Connell worries about Marianne's well-being, drawing the ire of Helen. During a session where Lukas takes bondage photos of her, Marianne gets upset and she breaks up with him.
10
Episode 10
Hettie Macdonald
Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
26 May 2020
After Rob commits suicide on New Year's Eve, Connell's mental health suffers, and he goes home to Sligo for the funeral. He becomes more distant from Helen even as she tries to support him, and eventually, she leaves him. He begins seeing a counselor who helps him connect to his emotions, and he deepens his connection with Marianne, despite the distance.
Back in Sligo, Marianne and Connell struggle to find identity in their relationship. Things come to a head between Marianne and Alan, and he breaks her nose. She calls Connell for help, leading him to threaten to kill Alan if he touches Marianne again, before taking her away, promising her that she will never experience such abuse again.
12
Episode 12
Hettie Macdonald
Alice Birch
26 April 2020 (2020-04-26)
29 April 2020
2 June 2020
With Connell and Marianne's relationship finally on track, he invites her to spend Christmas with his family, where she finds comfort in a healthy family dynamic. Meanwhile, Marianne's relationship with her mother has reached a low point. Connell receives an offer to study for a MFA program in New York for a year, prompting the pair to reflect upon their future together. Connell ultimately decides to take the offer with Marianne's support, although she refuses to come with him, finally feeling content with her life in Dublin. Marianne and Connell affirm their love to one another and agree to see where life leaves them in a year's time.
Although set in Trieste in the novel, filming took place in Central Italy, primarily in and around Sant'Oreste, Stimigliano, and the villa Il Casale on Tenuta di Verzano, in Lazio. They waited until February 2020 to film the Sweden scenes in Luleå so snow would be on the ground and the Baltic Sea frozen over for Marianne to walk on.[9]
Music
Episode 1 ends with the song "Warped Windows" by Anna Mieke.
Episode 2 opens with the song "Did It To Myself" by Orla Gartland and ends with the song "Angeles" by Elliott Smith.
Episode 9 ends with the song "Scene Suspended" by Jon Hopkins.
Episode 10 ends with the song "Everything I Am Is Yours" by Villagers.
Episode 11 ends with the song "Strange Weather" by Anna Calvi featuring David Byrne.
Episode 12 starts with the song "The Subterranean Heart" by Mount Alaska.
Episode 12 ends with the song "Sometimes" by Goldmund.[14]
The series also featured music from The Young Will Eat The Old, the debut album from Irish hip hop duo Tebi Rex.[15]
Release
The first look pictures came out on 1 November 2019. BBC Three and Hulu released their own teasers on 17 January 2020, followed by trailers on 31 March 2020.[16]
The 12 episodes became available as a BBC Three box set on BBC iPlayer on 26 April, followed by a BBC One airing on 27 April. The series became available on Stan in Australia on 27 April and began airing on RTÉ One in Ireland on 28 April.[17][18] The series premiered in the US on Hulu on 29 April.[19] The series has been sold to over 20 broadcasters worldwide.[20]
The series has received critical acclaim. On Rotten Tomatoes, the series has a 91% rating, with an average score of 8.2/10 based on 91 reviews. The site's critic consensus states, "Anchored by Daisy Edgar-Jones and Paul Mescal's vulnerable performances, Normal People is at once intimate and illuminating, beautifully translating the nuances of its source material."[23] On Metacritic the series has a score of 82 out of 100 based on reviews from 25 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[24]
Caroline Framke of Variety magazine wrote: "With its trifecta of elegant writing, directing, and acting, Hulu's Normal People is just as bleak and uncompromising as Rooney's novel—a feat, and one that takes several episodes to fully absorb. In fact, it took me until about halfway through to understand just how much it was affecting me. ... As Marianne and Connell's relationship grows deeper, Normal People becomes as immersive as the book that inspired it, making you both crave and dread knowing—or perhaps more accurately, experiencing—what happens next."[25]
The production has received particular praise for its realistic portrayal of intimate content[26] and the work of Ita O'Brien as the show's intimacy coordinator.[27] The nudity sparked debate on Irish radio, with callers to Joe Duffy's Liveline saying it was inappropriate.[28]
The series has been widely praised by major critics and publications. Linda Holmes of NPR described Normal People as "a lovely series, not just to binge, but perhaps to dole out to yourself a couple of episodes at a time"[29] while CNN described it as "perfectly [understanding of] the desires we place on communication technologies and the ways they nearly always come up short" and "irresistible in abnormal times".[30]
Prathyush Parasuraman of Film Companion wrote: "Rarely have I seen the sort of cultural dialogue that I saw post the release of Normal People in April 2020, when it was released in the UK. Based on Sally Rooney's namesake book, the story follows Marianne and Connell through the later years of their high-school, their years at college, and the post-collegiate restlessness, failing to be what one wished for oneself only years ago. It's set in and around Ireland, with brief detours to sunny Italy and snowy Sweden."[31]
Normal People reportedly gave BBC Three its best ever week on iPlayer (26 April to 3 May), receiving over 16.2 million programme requests across the 12 episodes, about 5 million of which were from 16- to 34-year-olds, and bringing BBC Three requests up to 21.8 million, doubling the previous record of 10.8 million from the release of the first series of Killing Eve. Seventy per cent of BBC Three requests that week were for Normal People and a quarter had finished all 12 episodes.[33][34] It became the most-streamed series of the year on the BBC, with 62.7 million views from April to November 2020.[35]
The first two episodes were reported to have been watched on RTÉ One by an average of 371,000 viewers with an additional 19,000 on RTÉ One +1 and 301,000 streams on RTÉ Player, becoming the most watched opening of a drama series on RTÉ Player. Thirty per cent of 15- to 34-year-olds watching TV were watching Normal People.[36] The finale had over 319,000 viewers, 33% of the total RTÉ audience and 20% increase over the previous week.
In June 2020, it was reported that Normal People had garnered over 3 million views on RTÉ Player, breaking the previous record for the streaming service of 1.2 million, which was held by the fourth series of Love/Hate.[37]
^Parasuraman, Pratyush (5 January 2021). "Normal People Review". Film Companion. Archived from the original on 5 January 2021. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
^"It's Marianne's fault we can't get a government to satisfy Normal People". Irish Independent. 23 May 2020. Archived from the original on 1 June 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2020. The author of Normal People is a self-professed Marxist... her politics seeps through her writing. It's no accident the central protagonists of the book that has captured the nation's imagination are the rich girl living in the mansion and the poor boy whose mother works as her family's cleaner. The TV version glosses over the discussions around 'The Communist Manifesto' and the feminist bible 'The Golden Notebook'.