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The back half of 2026 is shaping up to be an embarrassment of riches for drama fans. Westeros is going back to war, the Bennet sisters are getting yet another glow-up, and somehow Timothy Olyphant is in not one, but two shows on this list. Who’s #Blessed? We are.
From prestige juggernauts wrapping up their runs to splashy literary adaptations stacked with movie stars, here are the eight dramas we can’t stop thinking about, ranked from “we’ve cleared our calendars” to “we’ve been seated since January.”
8
‘The Five-Star Weekend’ (July 9)
Pour the rosé. Jennifer Garner stars as Hollis Shaw, a food influencer reeling from a devastating loss who decides the cure is a picture-perfect girls’ trip to Nantucket. The guest list pulls friends from different chapters of her life, and the ensemble assembled to play them is a delight: Chloë Sevigny, Regina Hall, Gemma Chan, and D’Arcy Carden, with Olyphant and Harlow Jane rounding out the cast of this eight-episode adaptation of Elin Hilderbrand’s bestseller, developed by Bekah Brunstetter.
Streamers have been chasing the beach-read boom ever since Netflix’s The Perfect Couple became a sensation, and Hilderbrand’s brand of sun-soaked secrets practically begs for the treatment. Add Garner, whose girl-next-door warmth makes her the ideal anchor for a story about grief hiding under a shiny veneer, and you have the kind of summer show tailor-made for TikTok’s clipping era. The trailer already has our book club group chat buzzing.
7
‘The Good Daughter’ (November 12)
Karin Slaughter is adapting her own novel for this one, which should tell you how protective she is of it. Rose Byrne and Meghann Fahy play Samantha and Charlotte Quinn, sisters who have spent twenty years trying to rebuild lives shattered by a single night of violence. When a new attack rocks their small town, Charlotte, now a lawyer like her father, is the first witness on the scene, and the case starts prying open every secret the family buried. (Brendan Gleeson is also in this thing.) Byrne and Fahy as trauma-bonded sisters? Someone in casting deserves a raise.
Fahy has been on an absolute tear since The White Lotus, and Byrne remains one of the most underrated dramatic actors working. All episodes drop on November 12, which means this crime thriller is built for a single, gut-wrenching weekend binge.
6
‘Pride & Prejudice’ (Fall 2026)
Yes, another one. No, we’re not complaining. Dolly Alderton penned this six-part take on Jane Austen’s most beloved novel, with Heartstopper director Euros Lyn at the helm. Emma Corrin steps in as Elizabeth Bennet opposite Jack Lowden’s Mr. Darcy, and the supporting cast is stacked: Olivia Colman, Rufus Sewell, Jamie Demetriou, Daryl McCormack, Freya Mavor, and Louis Partridge among them.
Every generation gets its Lizzie and Darcy, and the internet has been litigating this pairing since the casting news broke. The February teaser only poured gasoline on the discourse. Alderton understands modern romance and its humiliations better than almost anyone writing today, which makes her the most exciting person to take a crack at Austen in years. Expect yearning. Expect hand flexes. Expect think pieces. A lot of think pieces.
5
‘The Gilded Age’ Season 4 (Late 2026)
Bertha Russell changed society, and now the bill is coming due. Season 4 finds Carrie Coon’s social titan reckoning with the cost of her triumphs while Christine Baranski’s Agnes van Rhijn seizes a chance to claw back her old position. Marian (Louisa Jacobson) forges a new path, and Peggy (Denée Benton) fights to win over her future in-laws. Cynthia Nixon, Morgan Spector, Taissa Farmiga, and Audra McDonald are all back too for this next eight-episode season.
But the new arrivals are half the fun here. Dennis Haysbert, Jim Gaffigan, Elizabeth Marvel, and Tony winner Bonnie Milligan are all joining the party, and Jordan Donica has been promoted to series regular. This show has steadily transformed from a polite curiosity into appointment television, and the petty warfare of old New York money has never been more delicious. Late 2026 cannot come soon enough.
4
‘Lucky’ (July 15)
Anya Taylor-Joy: con artist, on the run, working the hell out of a blunt blonde bob. Sold yet? In this limited series based on Marissa Stapley’s bestselling novel (a Reese’s Book Club pick, naturally), Taylor-Joy plays Lucky, a grifter forced to flee when a multimillion-dollar heist goes sideways. Jonathan Tropper (Banshee) created the series, Reese Witherspoon’s Hello Sunshine produces along with Taylor-Joy, through her own banner.
The supporting cast is basically a heist crew of character actors: Annette Bening, Timothy Olyphant (him again), Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Drew Starkey, William Fichtner, and Clifton Collins Jr. The explosive trailer promises a pulpy, propulsive ride, and frankly, Taylor-Joy has been owed a great TV vehicle since The Queen’s Gambit. Count us in.
3
‘East of Eden’ (Fall 2026)
Florence Pugh as one of American literature’s great monsters? We are, as we said earlier, seated. Zoe Kazan spent years shaping this seven-episode adaptation of John Steinbeck’s sprawling classic, retold through the eyes of Cathy Ames, the manipulative antihero whose life entangles generations of the Trask family. Christopher Abbott and Mike Faist play brothers Adam and Charles Trask, with Ciarán Hinds, Tracy Letts, Martha Plimpton, and Hoon Lee filling out the ensemble.
Garth Davis (Lion) directed the first four episodes and Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre took the final three, and the May teaser, in which Pugh murmurs about wanting to disappear, already looks gorgeous and devastating in equal measure. Pugh doing capital-V villainy is uncharted territory for her, and centering Cathy reframes a novel that has been adapted before but never quite like this. Sorry to Austen, but this is the literary event series of the fall.
2
‘House of the Dragon’ Season 3 (June 21)
The Dance of the Dragons stops dancing around its promised destruction and goes straight to open war. Season 3 picks up right where the finale’s mobilizing armies left off, headlined by the long-awaited Battle of the Gullet, a naval bloodbath between the Velaryon fleet and the Triarchy. Emma D’Arcy’s newly emboldened Rhaenyra gains the North as Cregan Stark’s Winter Wolves march south, Matt Smith’s Daemon emerges from Harrenhal fully committed to the cause, and Ewan Mitchell’s Aemond keeps making choices that should prompt his mother, Alicent (Olivia Cooke) to have him committed.
Book readers know the carnage that awaits, and with showrunner Ryan Condal confirming the series ends with Season 4, every episode of these eight counts.
1
‘The Bear’ Season 5 (June 25)
Last call at The Bear. The fifth and final season opens after Sydney (Ayo Edebiri), Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), and Sugar (Abby Elliott) learn that Carmy (Jeremy Allen White) has walked away from the industry entirely, leaving the restaurant in their hands. With no money, a possible sale looming, and a literal torrential storm bearing down on Chicago, the new partners have to rally the whole crew for one last service and one last shot at a Michelin star. White, Edebiri, Moss-Bachrach, Elliott, Lionel Boyce, Liza Colón-Zayas, and Matty Matheson all return, with Oliver Platt, Will Poulter, and Jamie Lee Curtis also popping up in and out of the kitchen.
No show wrecks us quite like this one, and knowing it ends here makes the anticipation almost unbearable. FX confirmed in May that this is the final season, and all eight episodes hit Hulu on June 25. Will Carmy find peace? Unclear. Will we be crying into a bowl of risotto by the finale? Yes, chef
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Jessica Toomer
Almontather Rassoul




