5 Erin Doherty shows to watch if you liked her Emmy-winning performance in Adolescence

Sayan
77th Primetime Emmy Awards - Show - Source: Getty
Erin Doherty (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Erin Doherty has become one of the most talked-about British actors of her generation, and her recent Emmy win for Adolescence reinforced that reputation. What stood out about her performance was the way she performed without needing to exaggerate emotion.

She delivered lines with sharpness that felt genuine, and in the quiet moments, she managed to communicate more than many actors do with pages of dialogue. That ability to shift between vulnerability and control has made viewers want to follow her work more closely.


5 Erin Doherty shows to watch if you like Adolescence

1) A Thousand Blows

Erin Doherty (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
Erin Doherty (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Erin Doherty plays Mary Carr in A Thousand Blows, leader of the Forty Elephants. The gang targets department stores and trains, using speed and disguise to outsmart rivals. Mary runs the crew with strict discipline and views crime as a well-organized operation. Her tactics make each theft feel like a calculated strike.

Her relationship with Sugar Goodson adds sharp twists to the story. Mary resists compromise and forces others to conform, creating tension that drives each episode. Hezekiah must choose his allies carefully, and every decision Mary makes pushes him further into conflict. That conflict changes the course of the story.

Doherty’s stillness reads as menace, while her loyalty can vanish without warning. She redefines the power balance in East End London and makes a story about fists also a story about control. Her role sets the tone and gives the series its lasting edge.


2) Chloe

Erin Doherty (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images)
Erin Doherty (Photo by Kevin Mazur/Getty Images)

Chloe puts Erin Doherty at the center as Becky Green, who reinvents herself as Sasha. She builds a false identity from Instagram trails and past connections and slips into Chloe Fairbourne’s circle. Each episode shows how she copies details to win trust and hide her real life. The tension comes from her ability to maintain both selves.

The series explores the consequences of living a lie. Becky grows closer to Chloe’s husband and friend, yet every move raises the risk of collapse. The more she learns about Chloe, the more fragile her cover becomes. Six episodes stretch that pressure to the breaking point.

The finale pulls together clues left in plain sight. Doherty anchors it with restless energy and sharp detail and shows how obsession can consume someone. The role proves that she can carry a story from start to finish and maintain its intensity throughout.


3) The Crown (Seasons 3–4)

Erin Doherty (Photo by Kate Green/Getty Images)
Erin Doherty (Photo by Kate Green/Getty Images)

In The Crown, Erin Doherty stands out as Princess Anne. She plays her as sharp and funny and unwilling to soften. Early scenes show Anne riding and facing press attention with no patience. She adds a clear voice to a cast filled with quieter restraint.

Season four gives Anne more space with storylines involving Andrew Parker Bowles. Those links place her in the same orbit as Charles and Camilla and shift the tone of family drama. Her choices may not affect succession, but they change how viewers see the private world of the Windsors.

Doherty uses clipped delivery and cool stares that make each line hit harder. The role shows how a small part can significantly impact the tone of a larger story. It became her breakout role in global television, proving her range.


4) California Avenue

Erin Doherty (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)
Erin Doherty (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)

California Avenue offered Erin Doherty another opportunity to expand her range. She plays Lela, a young woman whose life unravels within the confines of a working-class neighborhood. The series follows her through family breakdowns, financial struggles, and choices that leave her caught between loyalty and survival.

Doherty drives the story by grounding Lela in everyday details. She smokes on stairwells, argues in kitchens, and moves through late-night streets where everyone knows her name. Each episode reveals more about her world, showing how small decisions can lead to lasting change.

The show uses its local setting as more than background and instead turns it into a map of limits and escape routes. Doherty keeps the character alive with sharp focus and unforced rhythm, making the series a strong entry in her growing list of television work.


5) Les Misérables (BBC)

Erin Doherty (Photo by Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/WireImage)
Erin Doherty (Photo by Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/WireImage)

The BBC’s Les Misérables gives Erin Doherty a brief role as Fabienne. She appears in the world of Fantine before Cosette’s birth. Her screen time is short yet her delivery makes the part stick. She adds weight to Fantine’s story without pulling away from the ensemble.

This version avoids the musical format and focuses on the novel. It depicts hardship with attention to detail and emphasizes social conditions. Dominic West, Lily Collins, and David Oyelowo lead the cast, but smaller roles add texture to the series. Doherty’s part is one of those touches.

Her work here is significant because it demonstrates the precision she would bring to larger roles later. You can see hints of the sharp presence that characterized her in The Crown and Chloe. It proved to be a step that helped shape her career path.


Follow for more updates.

Edited by Yesha Srivastava