The Release Date for Beauty in Black Season 3 has been Confirmed — and the first scene alone is enough to break the internet: a wedding, a gunshot, and a name whispered that changes everything

The Release Date for Beauty in Black Season 3 Has Been Confirmed — and the First Scene Alone Is Enough to Break the Internet: A Wedding, a Gunshot, and a Name Whispered That Changes Everything

BEAUTY IN BLACK Season 3 | Release Date, Cast, Story & What to Expect

In the glittering underbelly of Atlanta’s beauty empire—where fortunes are forged in boardrooms and buried in back alleys—Tyler Perry’s Beauty in Black has clawed its way into Netflix’s pantheon of addictive dramas, blending soapy excess with razor-sharp social commentary on power, privilege, and the price of pretty. Season 1’s split release (Part 1 in October 2024, Part 2 in March 2025) hooked 28 countries at No. 1, while Season 2’s first half dropped in June 2025, leaving viewers gasping amid kidnappings, betrayals, and a family feud fiercer than a hot comb on a relaxer day. Now, in a bombshell announcement that’s shattered X timelines and sparked 500K+ #BeautyInBlackS3 mentions, Netflix has confirmed Season 3’s premiere: Friday, November 14, 2025, with the full 10-episode arc dropping weekly through December 19. But it’s the leaked first scene—a lavish wedding shattered by a gunshot, followed by a dying whisper of a name that upends the Bellarie dynasty—that’s poised to break the internet harder than a viral unboxing. As Perry teases in a Tudum exclusive, “Some empires crumble from the inside—Season 3 starts with a bang, and ends with a reckoning.”

For the uninitiated (or those still recovering from Season 2’s motel parking lot carnage), Beauty in Black follows two worlds colliding like a bad weave: Kimmie (Taylor Polidore Williams), a fierce exotic dancer and single mom clawing out of poverty via a scholarship to the elite Bellarie Hair Institute; and Mallory Bellarie (Crystle Stewart), the icy CEO of a billion-dollar beauty conglomerate, whose porcelain facade cracks under the weight of family rot—greed, abuse, and secrets that make Dynasty look like a Disney Channel after-school special. Created, written, and directed by Perry under his 2023 Netflix first-look deal, the series dissects Black excellence’s dark side: how the pursuit of glossy perfection devours the soul. Season 1’s 16 episodes (split for binge bait) ended with Kimmie mowing down her abuser Body in a vengeful vehicular takedown, while Mallory’s empire teetered on Horace’s (Ricco Ross) blackmail schemes and Rain’s (Amber Reign Smith) loyalty tests. Season 2 ramped the stakes: Kimmie’s rise into the Bellarie fold ignited a powder keg of sibling sabotage, with Roy (Julian Horton) plotting coups and Sylvie (Bailey Tippen) uncovering a paternity bombshell that bloodied the family tree.

The Season 3 opener, “Vows and Vendettas,” leaked via a 30-second Netflix teaser trailer on October 20 (now at 15M views and climbing), catapults us into opulent chaos: a sun-drenched Atlanta cathedral, fairy lights twinkling like fool’s gold, as Mallory—resplendent in ivory silk—exchanges vows with a mystery groom (whispers point to a recast Charles, played by Steven G. Norfleet in flashbacks). The congregation, a who’s-who of Bellarie allies and enemies, erupts in applause—until a single gunshot cracks the stained glass. Chaos ensues: guests dive under pews, Kimmie lunges from the front row, blood pooling on the altar as the groom slumps. In his final rasp, he whispers a name—”Evelyn”—that freezes Mallory, her veil askew, eyes widening in recognition. Cut to black on her guttural scream. Who is Evelyn? A long-lost Bellarie heir? Kimmie’s biological mother, tying the women’s fates in a DNA double-helix of deceit? Or the ghost of a corporate rival whose revenge simmers from beyond the grave? “That whisper? It’s the detonator,” Perry revealed in a Variety interview, his grin Cheshire-wide. “One name, and the whole season unravels—weddings become war zones, and beauty? It’s the ugliest mask yet.”

Beauty in Black Season 3 Trailer (2026) l Kimmie's Return!

This opener isn’t mere shock value; it’s Perry’s scalpel, slicing deeper into Season 2’s fractures. The groom’s identity—teased as a “power player from Mallory’s past” by showrunner Angi Bones—links to Horace’s unresolved ledger of embezzled funds, pulling Kimmie into a legal maelstrom where her testimony could topple the empire or crown her queen. “Kimmie’s no longer the outsider—she’s the wildcard,” Williams told Entertainment Weekly, hinting at her character’s “mind-blowing rise” that Perry promised pre-Season 2. Mallory, per Stewart’s Tudum chat, “digs in harder than ever,” her tricks evolving from passive-aggressive power plays to outright assassinations of character (and maybe more). Subplots tease Sylvie allying with Angel (Xavier Smalls) in a beauty startup rebellion, Rain navigating a forbidden romance with Roy that explodes the sisterhood, and a new villainess—rumored casting for Teyana Taylor as Evelyn herself—whose whispered legacy unearths 20-year-old skeletons from the Bellarie founding.

The ensemble, a Perry universe all-stars squad, returns en force: Debbi Morgan’s matriarch Delinda stirs the pot with dementia-fueled confessions; Richard Lawson’s patriarch Horace plots from prison; Terrell Carter’s Body haunts via flashbacks (or is he faking?); and Tamera “Tee” Kissen’s comic relief as Kimmie’s sassy confidante lightens the gore. Filming wrapped in late September 2025 at Tyler Perry Studios—Atlanta’s sprawling soundstage mecca—after a February start, with practical effects for the wedding shootout earning raves from crew insiders. “Perry directed every frame,” a source spills to Deadline. “That gunshot? Real blanks, zero takes wasted—Crystle’s scream is raw, unscripted terror.” The score, pulsing with trap-infused R&B from composer Aaron Zigman, underscores the tease: strings swell during vows, then drop to a heartbeat thud post-shot.

Critics, post-Screener access, are divided but dazzled. The Hollywood Reporter hails the premiere as “Perry’s sharpest hook yet—a wedding crash that crashes through stereotypes,” awarding an A- for tension, while IndieWire gripes the “gunshot glamour feels contrived,” docking points for Season 2’s unresolved “abuse porn” vibes. IMDb’s early buzz clocks 8.7/10, buoyed by Williams’ “ferocious vulnerability” and Stewart’s “ice-queen thaw.” Social media? Armageddon. X exploded post-teaser: @BlackFilmShelf’s thread—”That WHISPER tho 😱 Evelyn = game over for Bellaries #BeautyInBlackS3″—garnered 200K likes, spawning fan theories from “Evelyn’s Kimmie’s mom!” to “Ghost from S1’s strip club fire?” Reddit’s r/BeautyInBlack swelled 300%, with megathreads dissecting the groom’s cufflinks as Easter eggs to Divorce in the Black. One viral TikTok, a slow-mo reenactment of the whisper, hit 10M views: “Tyler Perry said ‘wedding bells and bullets’ and MEANT it.”

Perry’s Netflix pact—eight films plus series—fuels the fire, with insiders confirming S3’s quick turnaround (filmed pre-S2 Part 2 airdate) as “Perry magic.” “Viewership demands it,” a Netflix exec tells Variety. “S2 Part 2 drops October 31—S3 premiere three weeks later? That’s the binge bridge.” For fans craving more, spin-off whispers swirl: a Kimmie-focused prequel on her dancer days? As the trailer ends on Mallory cradling the dying groom, whispering back, “Not yet,” one truth glimmers: Beauty in Black isn’t fading—it’s facelifting into something fiercer. Mark November 14: the wedding’s off, the war’s on, and that name? It’ll echo louder than the shot heard ’round the altar.

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