Bless Your Heart, You Should Be Watching Sweet Magnolias
Photo Courtesy of Netflix
Do you remember the glory days of the WB?
Everwood. Gilmore Girls. One Tree Hill. Dawson’s Creek.
These soapy family dramas chronicled the storylines of teens and the adults in their lives. They were set in small towns where everyone pretty much knew everyone else’s business. There was one restaurant. One church. One school. One gazebo. A town meeting had like 40 people in it. You couldn’t walk down the street without running into someone you knew. There was an innocence to the adolescent angst and a sweetness to the adult romances.
But the WB became the CW, and teens on TV are now more Rue Bennett than Rory Gilmore. Still, there’s a little corner of Netflix that transports us back to circa 2000, when Michigan J. Frog was part of our weekly television line up.
I’m talking, of course, about Sweet Magnolias which has returned for a second season on Netflix. The drama, based on a series of novels by Sherryl Woods, follows three best friends—Maddie (JoAnna Garcia Swisher), Helen (Heather Headley), and Dana Sue (Brooke Elliott)— who have lived their whole lives in Serenity, South Carolina. If it’s comforting TV and sweet, soapy storylines you seek, this series will provide.
In the pilot, which launched way back in May 2020, it’s revealed that Maddie’s husband Bill (Chris Klein), the town’s beloved pediatrician, is having an affair with Noreen (Jamie Lynn Spears), the nurse who works at his office. Noreen is also pregnant with Bill’s child. Wanting to forge a new path for herself, Maddie opens a spa with Helen (a lawyer) and Dana Sue (a chef with her own restaurant). The women buy the home of Serenity’s beloved matriarch Miss Frances (Cindy Karr) and voila, with a little construction and some paint, the Corner Spa is born! Their pal Trotter (Hunter Burke) teaches yoga, manages the front desk, and does pretty much everything else because he seems to be the spa’s only employee.
Sweet Magnolias wraps the viewer in comfort, starting with the dialogue. Allow me to share a few bon mots from the new season: “That woman has been whipping up cream since childhood. Do not mistake yourself for the cow.” Or “Sometimes no matter how I dress it up, my slip still shows.” Do people in South Carolina talk like this? Do people anywhere talk like this? I honestly don’t think so, but I enjoy it all the same.
There is a simplicity to their world. Helen is the only lawyer and practices all types of law. Need a divorce lawyer? Helen. Someone to review your business contracts? Helen. Someone to spring you from jail? Helen. And Dana Sue is the woman to call for all your food needs. Do you need someone to cater your event? Dana Sue. Send food over to someone who is sick? Dana Sue. The spa needs a little café? Dana Sue, of course.
Serenity is an idyllic town that most unfortunately does not exist in real life. It is #towngoals. Trotter and his husband are totally accepted. Racism is nonexistent. The show is body positive. While Elliott’s previous show Drop Dead Diva was about a skinny woman returning to Earth in a plus sized body, Dana Sue’s weight is never even mentioned. May all TV shows follow in Sweet Magnolias graceful lead.