The Four Seasons stars Marco Calvani, Erika Henningsen, and Kerri Kenney-Silver spoke with ComingSoon about the second season of the hit Netflix show. The trio discussed balancing hilarious moments with heartfelt story beats, Henningsen wearing a prosthetic belly, and more. The Netflix show returns with eight more episodes on May 28, 2026.
“Coming off a hard year, our group of friends carries on their tradition of vacationing together — now with a baby in tow. The Four Seasons picks back up with the core group — Kate (Tina Fey), Jack (Will Forte), Anne (Kerri Kenney-Silver), Danny (Colman Domingo), Claude (Marco Calvani), and Ginny (Erika Henningsen) — as they journey from the familiar comforts of the Jersey shore and upstate New York to the stunning landscapes of Italy. With warmth and wit, personal blind spots surface for the group as they each grieve their late friend and embark on new adventures. Co-created by Tina Fey, Lang Fisher, and Tracey Wigfield, The Four Seasons remains a heartfelt and hilarious tribute to long-term relationships, while continuing to explore the highs, lows, and humor of enduring friendships and love,” says the official description.
Tyler Treese: Marco, one thing that really blew me away about both seasons of The Four Seasons is how it handles the emotional beats. One moment I’m laughing super hard, then I’m tearing up. As an actor, you and Colman Domingo have some of the funniest and rawest emotional scenes this season. How is it bouncing between the two and really letting the humor bring out those emotions?
Marco Calvani: Wow. Well, first of all, I have to share this credit with my scene partner, to be honest. Colman is amazing, and he really is a lover of the craft. With him, when we have those scenes where we go from funny to dramatic or crazy and tragic, we really sit down before and look at the scene together. The togetherness is really key when you step onto set because we created that safety net on a script that honestly is impeccable. We all agree on this. We just need to learn the lines sometimes, and then you go with an open heart.
We are lucky that all of us are good people, so we are good scene partners for one another when we share scenes, and that is really half the job. Then we have good eyes on the other side to navigate us. We’ve been lucky that Tina Fey, Tracey [Wigfield], Colman, and Lang [Fisher] all also directed some of the episodes. So you really felt like you were being guided through that.
Kerri Kenney-Silver: It’s like a theater company in a way. Sometimes, when people or a friend will say specifically to me, “I love your work in the show.” I’ll say it doesn’t feel fair to take any credit because you’re given the most impeccable script. You’re sitting across from Oscar-dominated actors. If you show up and talk and aren’t lying, you’re good. It’ll work.
Calvani: Maybe pass through the makeup trailer before.
Kenney-Silver: Yes. Just get a little powder.
Erika Henningsen: Shoutout to our makeup team. We love them. That helps.
Kenney-Silver: That really does. Put a brush through your hair, throw on some Spanx, and away we go. I don’t even have to wear Spanx on the show.
Henningsen: Comfy clothes!
Kenney-Silver: Comfy clothes.
Tyler Treese: Erika, in spring, Ginny is extremely pregnant. How was acting with the prosthetic belly?
Erika Henningsen: Such a good question. We said in another interview that the goal of this was comfy clothes in great places, and I went, “Tina’s never worn a prosthetic belly,” but she has.
But I will say I loved it because, honestly, since I have not been pregnant, that feeling, and the fact that it was weighted, allowed me to feel some of the discomfort. I couldn’t stop touching it. In episodes one and two, I’m constantly touching my crystal ball of a belly.
Marco Calvani: It became a little fetish.
Henningsen: A fetish [laughs]. It was something that helped because when you get your script, and you’re like, “Oh wow, I’m that pregnant. How am I going to walk? How am I going to talk?” Then you get that prosthetic, and it kind of did so much of the work for me.
And I have to say, a prosthetic belly is no trouble in comparison to six live babies. We had a lot of crying babies after the spring episodes.
Thanks to Marco Calvani, Erika Henningsen, & Kerri Kenney-Silver for taking the time to talk about The Four Seasons Season 2.







































































