In the fictional suburb of Easttown,Pennsylvania (not to be confused with the realEasttown, Pennsylvania, which is also a Philadelphia suburb), police detective Marianne "Mare" Sheehan investigates the recent murder of a teenage mother while trying to keep her own life from falling apart. Mare is a local hero, having scored the winning basket in a high schoolbasketball game that won Easttown its first state championship 25 years earlier. She has also been unable to solve the case of another missing young girl for a year, leading many in the community to doubt her detective skills. Her personal troubles include a divorce, a son lost to suicide, and a custody battle with her son's formerlyheroin-addicted girlfriend over Mare's grandson.[2]
Kate Winslet as Marianne "Mare" Sheehan,[3] a detective sergeant in Easttown, Pennsylvania, who is investigating the murder of one young girl and the disappearance of another
In the small community of Easttown,Pennsylvania, Detective Mare Sheehan is ordered to reopen the year-old investigation into the disappearance of young Katie Bailey when the girl's mother, Dawn, complains on the news about theunsolved case. Adding to Mare's frustrations, her ex-husband Frank is remarrying and has invited Mare's whole family—including her mother Helen, teenage daughter Siobhan, and 4-year-old grandson Drew—to his engagement party on the same night Mare and her high school basketball teammates are being honored on the 25th anniversary of their state championship win. At a bar, Mare meets Richard, an author who has recently moved to the area, and they end up having sex. Meanwhile, Erin McMenamin, a teenage single mother who lives with her alcoholic father Kenny, argues with her baby's father, Dylan, and his new girlfriend Brianna when they come to get the baby for a weekend visit. Erin is later lured into the woods and beaten by Brianna in front of Dylan and other teenagers. Siobhan sees the fight and rescues Erin, who walks away into the woods alone. The next morning, Erin's dead body, nearly naked and with a large head wound, is found in a local creek.
Mare responds to the call about Erin's body and notifies Kenny, who immediately blames Dylan. Against Mare's wishes, county detective Colin Zabel, known for recently solving a nearby cold case, is brought in to help investigate both Erin's murder and Katie Bailey's disappearance. Under interrogation, Dylan denies killing Erin, but omits important details of their last encounters. Cell phone video of Brianna's attack on Erin surfaces; Mare publicly arrests Brianna for assault at her family's restaurant. Brianna's upset father Tony begins stalking Mare. Mare and Frank worry that Drew might have inherited the mental illness that caused his father, their son Kevin, to take his own life two years previously. Drew's mother Carrie, a recovering addict, seeks full custody of Drew. Mare accepts Richard's invitation to meet him at a reception in his honor, but their date goes poorly. Erin's best friend Jess tells Mare's friend Lori Ross that Erin confided in her that Dylan is not the real father of her baby; Jess thinks Frank, who briefly taught Erin in school, is the real father. A grieving Kenny abducts and shoots Dylan, leaving him for dead.
Kenny confesses to shooting Dylan, who has survived. Frank admits he helped Erin by buying her baby items, but denies any sexual relations or involvement in her murder. Mare gathers DNA samples from Frank and Dylan for paternity testing. The medical examiner reports that Erin's finger is missing from a gunshot and that there is no evidence of rape. The finger is later found in a local park, and Mare then finds a bullet, indicating that Erin was killed there and her body subsequently moved. Erin's phone records reveal that her last call was made after the fight with Brianna to Deacon Mark Burton, who claims that he only provided her with counsel. Mare is romantically pursued by Richard and also propositioned by a drunken Zabel, both of whom share stories of their own difficult personal relationships and family dysfunction. Unbeknownst to the police, Deacon Mark has Erin's bicycle, which he secretly throws into the river. Desperate to prevent Carrie from gaining custody of Drew, Mare plants heroin from the evidence room in Carrie's car; Chief Carter immediately discovers the truth and puts Mare on administrative leave, ordering her to get grief counseling.
Zabel becomes lead investigator on the case when Mare becomes suspended; however, she continues to investigate on her own. Paternity tests show that neither Frank nor Dylan fathered Erin's baby. Another girl, Missy Sager, goes missing. While searching Erin's dresser for clues, Mare finds a heart-shaped necklace engraved with a date. Zabel learns that Deacon Mark was transferred from his previous parish after allegations of inappropriate behavior with an underaged girl. Carrie gets Drew for the night, but begrudgingly returns him to Mare when he becomes homesick. After a therapy session, Mare remembers Kevin and Carrie violently abusing her and robbing her for drug money. Siobhan struggles with her own feelings about Kevin and her family. She ends her relationship with Becca and begins a new relationship with Anne, who she met through a gig her band did. Richard and Zabel both ask Mare for a date on the same night. Dawn Bailey receives a call claiming that her daughter Katie is alive and demanding $5,000 for her return. When she goes to meet the caller, she finds out the culprit was Freddie Hanlon. Missy Sager is imprisoned in a soundproof room in the attic of a tavern, and finds Katie Bailey alive and being held captive there.
Mare learns that Erin stayed with Billy Ross, her father's cousin, for a couple of months following the death of her mother. Brianna grows suspicious of Dylan, who was absent from their bed for some time on the night of Erin's death. Dylan and his friend meet with Jess to burn Erin's hidden journals, but Jess secretly keeps a photograph from one of them. Mare goes on a date with Zabel, but it sours when she continuously brings up the case. Zabel admits to Mare that he did not really solve the case that made his career, but instead relied on files obtained from a private investigator. Later, Mare and Zabel interview a young prostitute who narrowly escaped strangulation and kidnapping by a man in a blue van. Using a partial license plate number provided by the girl, Mare and Zabel track down the kidnapper, Wayne Potts. Katie and Missy bang on a pipe to alert Mare and Zabel to their presence in Potts' attic, causing Potts to shoot and kill Zabel and wound Mare in the arm. An unarmed Mare flees through the house, eventually retrieving Zabel's gun and killing Potts as backup arrives.
Katie and Missy return home, but Potts had an alibi the night of Erin's murder. With Zabel dead, Chief Carter lifts Mare's suspension and puts her back in charge of Erin's murder investigation. Brianna tells Mare about Dylan's unexplained absence the night of the murder, and Dylan invokes his right to a lawyer. Mare learns that Erin attended a Ross family reunion at a lake, same as the date engraved on her heart-shaped pendant, and that Erin and her father, Kenny, stayed in the same cabin as Billy. Pop Ross tells his son John that Billy came home covered in blood the night of Erin's murder. John talks to Billy, who tearfully states that he killed Erin. John tells his wife Lori, adding that Billy and Erin had an incestuous relationship that began at the reunion and that Billy fathered Erin's child. John and Billy go on a last fishing trip together; their tackle box contains a gun. Despite John telling Lori to keep it a secret, Lori tells Mare about Billy. Mare calls Chief Carter to let him know she is driving to the fishing spot to arrest Billy for Erin's murder. Jess comes to the police station with her mother to give Chief Carter the photograph she took from Erin's journal. Upon viewing the photo, Chief Carter orders his men to get Mare on the phone.
The photo shows Erin lying in bed next to a sleeping John. Jess informs Chief Carter that she and Dylan burned the journals to conceal any sensitive information and to ensure Erin's baby stays with Dylan's parents. At the fishing location, John aims the gun at Billy, planning to kill him and pin Erin's murder on him, but Mare arrives just in time to stop John. John reveals that he had a relationship with Erin and is the father of her child, explaining that Erin called him away from Frank's engagement party to meet her at the park, where she threatened to shoot herself. He claims he accidentally shot her while they were struggling for the gun, and that he and Billy moved her body into the woods to divert suspicion onto the other kids present that night. John admits he persuaded Lori to lie and tell Mare that Billy was the one who killed Erin. Both John and Billy end up in prison, but Billy is released on bail, and Deacon Mark is set free as well. Carrie, who has relapsed into drug use, goes back to rehab and drops her custody battle, allowing Drew to stay with Mare and her mother. Glen Carroll reflects on his loneliness and mentions to Mare that he's noticed some items missing from his home, including his vintage handgun (the same type that fired the fatal bullet), but he acknowledges it was returned to his shed with two rounds missing. The only other person who had access to the shed was John and Lori's 13-year-old son, Ryan. Ryan admits that he knew about his father's affair with Erin and lured her to the park, intending to use Glen's gun to scare her away from his family. Unfortunately, Ryan accidentally killed her when his intimidation attempt turned into a physical altercation, and his father John and uncle Billy covered it up to protect him. Ryan is sent to juvenile detention, which leads a heartbroken Lori to angrily end her friendship with Mare. Later on, Frank and Faye tie the knot, Siobhan heads off to college, Richard and Mare declare their love for each other, Lori and Mare make amends, and Mare finally finds the courage to revisit the attic where Kevin died.
In January 2019, it was reported thatBrad Ingelsby, creator of the show, would write all episodes, withGavin O'Connor directing. Executive producers include Ingelsby, O'Connor, Kate Winslet,Paul Lee, Mark Roybal, and Gordon Gray.[6][15][16] In January 2020, it was announced thatCraig Zobel would replace O'Connor as director due to scheduling issues and also serve as executive producer.[17]
Regarding the setting, Ingelsby stated "sort of an amalgam" which he explained "It’sCoatesville, it’sAston, it’sDrexel Hill."[18] Ingelsby stated that he chose the name Easttown because "it sounded like such a generic town name."[18]
Filming of the show began in the fall of 2019 around suburban Philadelphia and was reported to still be in progress as of March 2020, with plans to continue through April.[19][24] However, production was shut down early due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[25] In early September 2020, a Philadelphia news station reported that filming was set to resume within the month.[26]
Because the story is set in a fictionalized version ofEasttown Township inChester County, Pennsylvania, where series creatorBrad Ingelsby was born (the show moves the location east toDelaware County, which is adjacent toEasttown Township), there were discussions about whether to use the "Delco accent", a version ofPhiladelphia English common in Delaware County. It was Winslet who insisted that the accent be used, despite being a particularly difficult accent to learn, because she felt the community itself was an important character in the story, and the authentic accent would help emphasize that.[27] "There were a lot of things I could have really leant into that would have made it sound like I was doing something a bit gimmicky and I didn't want that to happen," Winslet said. "So I just had to drill it and drill it and drill it."[18] She claimed that learning the accent was so difficult that it caused her to "throw things".[28] Dialect coach Susanne Sulby assisted the actors.[18]
Filming locations include a train station and high-school gymnasium inCoatesville, Pennsylvania (a city in Chester County), and anAmerican Legion hall in Ogden, a community in Delaware County.[29] Inglesby has said that many of the filming locations were aroundAston Township, in Delaware County.[30] Winslet reportedly said that, while filming the show, she became obsessed withWawa convenience stores. "Wawa was a big part of my life for well over a year," she said.[30] Wawa stores were used as scouting locations for the production's costume designers.[31]
Mare of Easttown received critical acclaim. Onreview aggregatorRotten Tomatoes, the series has an approval rating of 95% based on 128 reviews, with an average rating of 8.1/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Grounded by a career-best Kate Winslet,Mare of Easttown's ambitions at times exceed its reach, but its central mystery is supported by such strong sense of place and character it hardly matters."[34] OnMetacritic, the series has a weighted average score of 81 out of 100 based on reviews from 42 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[35]
Winslet received widespread praise for her performance, including from Lucy Mangan ofThe Guardian who wrote, "If you can have a defining performance this late in a career, this is surely Winslet's. She is absolutely wonderful."[36] Alex Abad-Santos ofVox described Winslet's performance as "mesmerizing", adding that "she allows us to see the ugliness Mare is capable of and how obsessive, perhaps even abusive, she can be when she's threatened."[37]The Wall Street Journal's Dorothy Rabinowitz noted "Winslet's eloquent command of the role is obvious from the outset".[38] Ben Travers ofIndieWire wrote, "Winslet's immersed performance could carry a far lesser work by itself", while adding that her East American dialect is "convincing and her physical work is flawless."[39]Richard Roeper of theChicago Sun-Times declared, "Winslet adds to a long list of magnificent, disappear-into-the-character performances...one of the most resonant performances of her career."[40] Caryn James of theBBC wrote, "Winslet makes an unglamorous return to TV...and her fierce, ordinary heroine is gloriously real."[41]
Inkoo Kang ofThe Hollywood Reporter gave it a mostly positive review describing it as "uneven, but masterfully suspenseful".[42] Kang compared the series with British crime dramaHappy Valley,[42] a comparison echoed by Fiona Sturges ofThe Independent, who wrote that "addiction, abuse and death were woven into the fabric of life" in both dramas, while acknowledging similarities between both shows' protagonists.[43]The New York Times was dismissive in its review, with television critic Mike Hale writing: "Some style in the direction or honest feeling in the screenplay could have mitigated the dreariness, but 'Mare' doesn't offer much beyond Ben Richardson's burnished cinematography."[2] Aplot twist in the final episode received lukewarm reviews from various outlets. ForThe A.V. Club, Joshua Alston wrote, "While [the final episode] is a triumphant conclusion to Mare's emotional arc, as a conclusion to a mystery, it's a mixed bag [...] the whole thing just feels arbitrary and confusing and lacks the emotional logic this show is normally so good at."[44] InDecider, Sean T. Collins agreed but praised the leads' performances, writing, "The resolution of the mystery is a bit 'twists and fake-outs for twists' and fake-outs' sake.' But each new revelation came with an emotionally devastating payload for the characters, with Winslet and Nicholson in particular doing their best work of the series."[45]
Critics and viewers have also particularly praised the series and Winslet for convincingly replicating thePhiladelphia regional accent, an oddity in mainstream media. The specific version of the Philadelphia accent is known as the "Delco accent", afterDelaware County to the southwest of Philadelphia.[46] The characters' accents, along with their fondness forWawa, were parodied in a May 2021Saturday Night Live sketch.[47]
Mare of Easttown proved to be a record breaking ratings hit. The massive viewership resulted inHBO Max servers crashing shortly after the finale was released on the streaming service.[48]
The final episode ofMare of Easttown drew four million viewers over the holiday weekend across HBO and HBO Max, with nearly three million viewers Sunday night (all platforms), marking a series high for both linear and digital, according to HBO. The finale also set the record as the most watched episode of an original series on HBO Max during its first 24 hours of availability, besting the finales ofThe Undoing andThe Flight Attendant over the same period of time.Mare of Easttown also joinedThe Undoing as the only series in HBO's history to see consecutive growth week-to-week.[49]
Viewership and ratings per episode ofMare of Easttown
The show was released as a limited series. However, Winslet stated in August 2021 that she "would love to return" as Mare, and that for a potential second season, Ingelsby "has shared some very cool ideas. We will see what happens. I also have to figure out if I can do it. Can I go through it again? It did cost me a lot emotionally to be her, and I have to figure out if I can summon it all up again and do it again."[76]
In November 2024, creator Brad Ingelsby addressed the speculations of turningMare into a regular series and the possibility of a second season: "Mare's journey in that show was so emotional... it's hard to come up with an emotional story that could compete with losing a son and having to confront that." He came up with the story forTask, which "felt like it lives in the same world asMare," though always intended to be a standalone series.[77]