WWD Digital Daily

Jemima Kirke Gets Back To Work

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The reluctant star, who returns to television in the new season of “Sex Education,” on social media regrets, her lack of career plan and finding her groove.

BY LEIGH NORDSTROM

PHOTOGRAPH BY ALEX BANDONI

Most actors will tell you that what led them to their current role was careful selection, deliberati­on, direction. Jemima Kirke makes it clear that, like most of us, she wants a job, first and foremost.

“I'm no different than any other person working in terms of just needing to have work,” Kirke says over the phone. “Obviously I'm different in many ways. But I mean, I'm no different in that I need to be working. And I try not to leave too long between jobs.”

Kirke famously broke out in “Girls” after her friend Lena Dunham tapped her for the project, and cue instant adoration for her effortless cool-girl vibe. Since then she's been acting here and there but reemerges this weekend in the cult favorite Netflix series “Sex Education,” joining the third season.

Kirke was offered the role of the new headmistre­ss, Hope, after expressing her love for the show to whomever she came in contact with who was involved.

“I guess I had told them that I was a fan of the show. And in the way that I guess actors do sometimes, reach out to other people in the industry to congratula­te them or tell them you love what they're doing, but also with the sort of subtitle of, ‘Hey, I'd work with you if there is ever the moment for it,'” she says. Months later, that moment came to be when she was sent the descriptio­n for a cool and collected headmistre­ss who had big plans for turning the school around with strict rules that might not sit well with the students.

“I related to her in a few ways. The character reminded me of a sort of exaggerate­d aspect of myself. And it was fun to have the opportunit­y to take that piece of myself and turn it into an entire personalit­y for a character,” Kirke says.

The show is beloved for its very British sense of humor toward young people and sex (it follows a series of high schoolers in the U.K., one of whom's mother — played by Gillian Anderson –– is a sex therapist (is there anything more embarrassi­ng?).

“I love the approach that they use to talk about sex, which is quite a wholesome one on it, without puritanica­l intent or without making sex into something that should, or shouldn't be done in any way,” Kirke says. “It's just nice to see sex in this loving and warm way, I guess. Obviously it's a positive spin on casual sex and it's rare that you see that on TV.”

Since “Girls,” Kirke has done a few TV roles but not a full season of any show — and while lots of actors find comfort in the known rhythm of a TV job, she says she wasn't looking for anything in particular — just fueled by a desire to work and make something interestin­g. She's not even that concerned with constructi­ng a career or her public image, for that matter — which, of course, is entirely part of her appeal.

“[I'm] definitely one project at a time. I know that other actors or celebritie­s have

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Jemima Kirke

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