There’s different types of shoes this season, there’s a lot of gloves, and there’s weirdly more purple and violet. There are new silhouettes that I wore that feel slightly more European. She’s more inspired by her French colleagues, her friends in Paris, and also old French cinema. “She stays who she is, but she starts to be inspired by the people around her and the culture that she’s a part of in the city that she’s in. “Emily’s style changes a little bit this season,” Collins says. “And it’s a Darren Star–produced, –created, colorful, bright, romantic version of what the story would be.” “It's a heightened version of this world because it’s a comedy,” Collins emphasizes. It’s still very much the same show you love-or love to pick on-from before. “She's really leaning into the environment and allowing herself to embrace it and become one with it.”īut by no means does that translate to a grittier, less colorful version of Emily in Paris. “You really go into different areas of the city, and see Emily trying a little harder and making an effort in her new city,” Collins says. In season two-out December 22-Emily starts attending French class and making a real attempt at learning the language, both spoken and unspoken. That meant having Emily embrace authentic French culture instead of just showing the typical Instagrammable tourist spots. She’s valuing herself a little more than she used to…and that’s when this new person comes in, and you get to see how that jars and excites her.” STÉPHANIE BRANCHU/NETFLIX for Emily wants to do the right thing, but she’s also at a point in her life where she’s very work-driven and exploring her options. “And I think that that’s going to be fun to see how people start to either solidify or change their opinions. “I think there’s going to be a lot of people that aren’t expecting to be Team Alfie, because they were so pro-Gabriel, that I think that they’re going to get a little surprised when all of a sudden people start to feel like, Maybe this is the guy that Emily should be with,” says Collins. And with SATC creator Darren Star at the helm and Collins as the lead-it was exactly what we needed, when we needed it.
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There was eclectic fashion, and thanks to Sex and the City alum Patricia Field, along with Marylin Fitoussi, every episode was like watching a stunning runway show. There was also a hot French chef and a new star in Lucas Bravo. Lily Collins was Emily Cooper, an ambitious, fashion-obsessed marketing/social media exec from Chicago sent to the City of Light to work at marketing firm Savoir.
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During a year without much, if any, travel, or life as we knew it, Emily in Paris was the next best thing to savoring a croissant and a latte along the Seine wearing an Alaïa dress and not the same pair of sweatpants. And here at Glamour: “Netflix Just Released the First Trailer and It’s Perfect.”Īnd honestly, it was. “Our Younger withdrawal just got a little more manageable,” proclaimed Vulture. “It looks like Sex and the City set in Paris,” PopSugar wrote.
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In September 2020, when the first trailer for a new Netflix series called Emily in Paris was released, the internet almost immediately declared it your next TV obsession.