đ„ From the Creator of Derry Girls Comes Netflixâs Next Big Series
Lisa McGee reunites with a powerhouse cast to preview How to Get to Heaven From Belfast, one of Netflixâs biggest debuts of February 2026.
Sharp, emotional, and packed with that signature Northern Irish wit, the new series promises friendship, secrets, and chaos in equal measure.
February 2026 is locked â and one storyline is already sparking major buzz. đ
Derry Girls Creator Lisa McGee & Cast Preview New Netflix Series âHow to Get to Heaven From Belfastâ
âHow to Get to Heaven From Belfastâ is one of Netflixâs biggest series debuts of February 2026.

How To Get To Heaven From Belfast Season 1. Sinead Keenan as Robyn Winters, Caoilfhionn Dunne as Dara Friel, Roisin Gallagher as Saoirse Shaw. . Cr. Christopher Barr/Netflix
Ahead of Lisa McGeeâs latest comedic odyssey across Northern Ireland, she and the cast sat down in front of audiences at the BFI to preview whatâs to come from their brilliant new series.Â
For the unacquainted, Lisa McGee is the esteemed creator of Northern Irish comedy-drama Derry Girls, a series set against the backdrop of the Troubles. After three stellar seasons, Derry Girls wrapped up in 2022. But now McGee returns to the place she knows best, Northern Ireland, for a new irreverent and hilarious odyssey called How to Get to Heaven From Belfast.
How to Get to Heaven From Belfast follows three lifelong friends in their late 30s: Saoirse (Roisin Gallagher), a popular TV writer; Robyn (Sinead Keenan), a stressed-out mother of three; and Dara (Caoilfhionn Dunne), a carer. Having grown up and moved apart, leading very different lives, they are brought together after learning that Greta, the estranged fourth member of their friendship group, has sadly passed away. Together, they journey together to pay their condolences. But before long, old secrets begin to resurface, and they learn that Gretaâs death may not be all what it seems to be.Â

All eight episodes of How to Get to Heaven From Belfast drop on Netflix this week. The new series creator and writer Lisa McGee, as well as director Michael Lennox and the three stars â RoĂsĂn Gallagher, Sinead Keenan, and Caoilfhionn Dunne â recently sat down for a big Q&A at the BFI, hosted by journalist and a broadcaster Charlie Girling. It was a big discussion, and weâve compiled all of the highlights below.
All of the highlights, tidbits, and key takeaways from the Q&A with Lisa McGee and director Michael Lennox

While the core cast may be different from Derry Girls, How to Get to Heaven From Belfast retains many of the same faces behind-the-scenes, not least director Michael Lennox, who helmed nineteen episodes of Derry Girls. It shares much of the same DNA. âItâs been incredible working on this because itâs the exact same team behind the camera,â McGee said. âSo to be reunited with them all and to make something a bit more heightenedâIâve always wanted to have a crack at a mystery.â
The show catches the eye immediately, largely because of the unique, long title. Such a title was not actually dreamed up by McGee. Rather, it was handed to her on a flyer⊠literally. âWhen I was a student at Queenâs University in Belfast in Freshersâ Week, a street preacher gave me a flyer with the title on it. And I didnât go to the meeting, but I remembered it, and thought that that would be brilliant for something someday.â
For Michael Lennox, getting involved in this project was a no-brainer. âWhen I read this for the first time, it was just this sort of madness,â he said. âThe madness that comes from Lisaâs mind because she just has such her own DNA when she writes in her work, and itâs just such a privilege to be part of that show and contribute to it.â
âIt was an insane shoot, but we had an amazing crew,â he added. âWe had a lot of people from Derry Girls. But it wasnât just me who was part of the directing team; we had George [Kane] and Rachna [Suri] who are here, who did multiple episodes, and it just gets better as we go through the show. So itâs just such an amazing Northern Irish crew, and Brian [Falconer] and everyone hereâit was just one big film family.â
Filming in Ireland is special not just because of the people, but also for the landscapes. âItâs an amazing place to film,â he explains. âIt has so many faces. You know what I mean, itâs epic. You donât know whatâs around the cornerâit can be mystical, you know, it can be transcendent in places. So itâs a real gift for me to go around and find it, and itâs sort of the place itself just echoed what these guys were going through and everything sort of had this sort of cohesion, so it was brilliant.â
If thereâs one signature of McGeeâs work, itâs the dark sense of humour. Characters can find themselves in truly grim situations, but thereâs always a comedic spin. You laugh out loud, sometimes guiltily. This humour is indicative of Northern Ireland. âWhat I like about that sort of Northern Irish sense of humor is how quickly it goes from one thing to the other,â she explained. âHow theyâve had this very scary experience at the wake, and theyâve realized something really terrifyingâ that itâs not their friend in the coffinâbut then they immediately start arguing over the fact that Dara does like lemon drizzle cake. That feels very truthful to me.â
The whole concept of bringing these old friends together where they embark on a number of misadventures, likens itself to a very strange comparison. âTheyâre like the A-Team but bad,â McGee said. âI always had this idea of this Mom-wagon being the A-Team van. You know the way the A-Team van got cooler and cooler because they would add bits to it? But theirs just gets shittier and shittier because they keep messing it up.â
AD
While this show might be completely original, Lisa McGee couldnât help but drop in a few nods to Derry Girls; thereâs one scene in particular involving a mural. âThereâs something that happens thatâs a bit of a nod to Derry Girls, yeah,â she teased.
Stars RoĂsĂn Gallagher, Sinead Keenan, and Caoilfhionn Dunne discuss their experience on How to Get to Heaven From Belfast

How To Get To Heaven From Belfast Season 1. Caoilfhionn Dunne as Dara Friel, Roisin Gallagher as Saoirse Shaw, Sinead Keenan as Robyn Winters Cr. Christopher Barr/Netflix
A show like How to Get to Heaven From Belfast lives or dies on its core cast. If the casting isnât perfect, and the main trio donât have infectious chemistry, the whole thing falls apart. Thankfully, this series doesnât enter that pitfall. The trio of RoĂsĂn Gallagher, Sinead Keenan, and Caoilfhionn Dunne have chemistry to spare.
When they first met, it was a particularly awkward process, as Sinead Keenan (Robyn) recounts:
We had never met each other, and we were thrown inâlike, it was in an office, like a casting room in Spotlight. And Lisa and Michael were there, and lovely Liz Lewin and Caroline Leddy were there, and Carla Stronge, our casting director. And there were plastic chairs, like you get in school, and the plastic chairs were made to look like a car. And we had scripts, and it was all like, âHello, nice to meet you. Hello, nice to meet you. Oh, Iâve seen you inâŠâ And then it was like, âRight, jump in.â It was all chairs and props and walking and talking and pieces of paper.
All things considered, the casting room experience worked wonders. Caoilfhionn Dunne (Dara) left with confidence. âI knew it,â she said. âJust from the reaction in the room. It wasnât kind of anything that we were doing; it was the minute they started laughing from us doing very little. Which is a good sign in this particular circumstanceâIâd be worried in any otherâbut yeah, the reaction to the three of us was perfect in everything that we did. They laughed when we wanted them to laugh, and when we didnât want them to laugh.â
Chemistry was never an issue. RoĂsĂn Gallagher (Saoirse) found the key to what makes these female friendships to important. âPeople have talked about female friendships and what it is that makes them important, and itâs just occurred to me that women have this incredible ability to just go straight for the jugular in terms of conversation. Itâs like, âTell me all about your labor.â Like, girl, thatâs the sort of conversations that were being had, you know?â
Going back to the A-Team comparison, the vote on who would be the best team member was unanimous. Look no further than Sinead. âYouâre resilient,â Dunne said. âYouâre not scared of a lot of things. Youâre not scared of more things than me. Yeah, no, I think youâre just made of stern stuff, woman, and youâre not to be crossed.â
All 8 episodes of How to Get to Heaven From Belfast are streaming on Netflix from Thursday, February 12.Â