'The Four Seasons' season 2 whisks Tina Fey, Will Forte, Colman Domingo and more abroad
Pack your bags because "The Four Seasons" is back.
Following its debut in May 2025, the hit Netflix show starring Tina Fey, Will Forte, Kerry Kenney-Silver, Colman Domingo, Marco Calvani and Erika Henningsen as a group of traveling friends, is back for a second season.
"There's more humor in this season," Kenney-Silver told ABC News about season 2. "There's dramatic decisions to be made, big things that happen, big risks being taken, but also physical comedy that's bigger than was last season."

Based on the 1981 film of the same name, the show focuses on the decadeslong bond of three lifelong married couples. Just like the 1981 film, which starred Carol Burnett, Alan Alda, Rita Moreno and more, the show sees the group going on weekend getaways.
The group is suddenly upended when one couple -- Anne and Nick (Kenney-Silver and Steve Carrell, respectively) -- abruptly divorces and Nick introduces the group to a younger girlfriend, Ginny (Henningsen). Things take a turn when Nick suddenly dies after an argument with Ginny, who reveals to the group at the end of season 2 that she's pregnant with Nick's baby.
Teasing the upcoming season, Fey, who plays Kate and is a co-creator of the show, said, "Ginny and Anne, weirdly, are sort of linked story-wise all season because Anne's trying to figure out what she should do next in her life. And Ginny's trying to figure out how to raise a baby alone. They kind of turn toward each other."

Fey added that Claude and Danny (Calvani and Domingo) are facing discussions about having children and weighing whether they should push through it or not. In terms of Kate and her husband Jack (Forte), Fey said that they're "trying to get it right for once."
As for the group, following the death of Nick, Forte said that the whole group is "navigating it in a different way."
"Relationships go through so many peaks and valleys," he added. "When you have that added emotional component, everything is amped up so they take advantage of it in a really wonderful way."

While there is an element of grief in season 2, the show's co-creators, Lang Fisher and Tracey Wigfield, said that it doesn't focus entirely on grief.
"It's a season about what happens in the wake of losing someone who's so central to your group and who's such a close friend of yours and how do you bounce back from that?" Fisher said.
When the cameras weren't rolling, the cast shared what it was like behind the scenes and how '70s music was involved.
"We'd come out of hair and makeup and we're like, are you ready to hang out for 10 hours today?" Henningsen said.
Fey added, "There's no short of bits around. And Coleman is mostly singing theme songs from '70s TV shows"

"It's just so fun to make this show," Forte said. "We've seen the table read and we know the writers have done such a great job. And everything's so funny. It's so fun seeing how everybody brings it to life."
With season 2 taking audiences to Italy, some of the cast have their sights set on someplace Mediterranean.

"Mykonos!" Kenney-Silver, Calvani and Henningsen said. "We're trying to manifest it."
All eight episodes of "The Four Seasons" season 2 are available to stream now on Netflix.







