Beauty in Black Season 3 CONFIRMED — and the new official trailer teases chaos behind every perfect smile. Lena’s empire is growing… but so is the list of people who want to see her fall

Beauty in Black Season 3 Confirmed: Trailer Teases Chaos in Lena’s Expanding Empire

Beauty in Black' Renewed for Season 2 at Netflix & New Tyler Perry Movie In  The Works

In the glittering underbelly of Atlanta’s high-society salons and shadowy boardrooms, where every manicure hides a motive and every red lip conceals a vendetta, Tyler Perry’s Beauty in Black is priming for its most explosive chapter yet. Netflix dropped the bombshell confirmation today: Season 3 is officially greenlit, hot on the heels of Season 2’s jaw-dropping finale that left fans gasping over Kimmie’s iron-fisted takeover of the Bellarie cosmetics dynasty. The new official trailer, a slick 2:15 sizzle reel unleashed across YouTube and X, pulses with betrayal and ambition, teasing “chaos behind every perfect smile.” At the center? A reimagined Lena—wait, make that Kimmie Belarie (Taylor Polidore Williams), the former stripper turned mogul whose empire swells like a bad spray tan, but whose enemies multiply faster than knockoff lashes. As whispers of corporate sabotage and family feuds echo through the trailer, one thing’s clear: in Beauty in Black, power isn’t just skin deep—it’s a weapon, and Kimmie’s list of foes is longer than a Black Friday returns line.

The announcement landed like a perfectly timed plot twist, mere weeks after Season 2 Part 2 wrapped its 16-episode arc on Netflix, racking up 28 million global views in its first month alone. Tyler Perry, ever the prolific powerhouse, teased the renewal on his Instagram Live last night, beaming from his Atlanta studios: “Y’all thought Season 2 was messy? Season 3? Honey, it’s a full-on weave snatch. Kimmie’s not just surviving—she’s slaying, but the knives are out.” Filming kicks off November 2025 in Perry’s 330-acre Tyler Perry Studios lot, with an eye toward a mid-2026 premiere—faster than you can say “renewal cliffhanger.” The trailer’s drop coincided with Netflix Tudum’s fall event, where execs touted Beauty in Black as a cornerstone of their “bold Black storytelling” slate, alongside renewals for The Chi and Power Book IV: Force. X lit up instantly: @BlackDramaQueen posted the trailer link with “Lena who? Kimmie said EMPIRE MODE! Season 3 gonna have me unemployed from work,” netting 15K likes and a flood of stitches on TikTok.

For the uninitiated—or those still recovering from Season 1’s strip-club-to-boardroom glow-up—Beauty in Black is Perry’s soapy sudser about two worlds colliding in a haze of hairspray and high stakes. Kimmie (Williams), the resilient exotic dancer from the wrong side of the tracks, catapults from pole to power after marrying (and outlasting) cosmetics titan Horace Bellarie (Ricco Ross). Now, as COO of the eponymous beauty conglomerate, she’s Lena 2.0: sharper, savvier, and saddled with stepkids who plot like it’s a Real Housewives reunion. Parallel plotline? Ambitious attorney Mallory (Crystle Stewart), whose cutthroat law firm battles the Bellaries in a lawsuit that blurs ethics and extensions. Season 2 escalated the drama—Kimmie inherits the empire post-Horace’s “mysterious” heart attack (poisoning suspicions abound), Mallory uncovers trafficking ties in the supply chain, and betrayals fly thicker than foundation. The finale? A double-cross at the annual Beauty Ball leaves Kimmie shot (non-fatally) and Mallory fleeing with incriminating files, setting up Season 3’s powder keg.

The trailer, directed by Perry himself with his signature flair for melodrama, opens on a close-up of Kimmie’s flawless smile cracking under fluorescent lights—cue the tagline: “Behind every perfect smile? Pure pandemonium.” Quick cuts flash her empire’s growth: lavish product launches in Dubai, a hostile takeover of rival brand GlowUp, and Kimmie strutting boardrooms in power suits that scream “Yoncé meets Wall Street.” Williams owns the screen, her voiceover dripping honeyed menace: “They called me a gold digger. Now? I’m mining the whole damn vein.” But the chaos lurks: shadowy figures tamper with lipstick batches (laced with allergens?), Horace’s vengeful widow (Debbi Morgan, reprising with venom) whispers poison in gilded ears, and stepson Charles (Steven G. Norfleet) rallies siblings for a coup, his sneer in one shot screaming “fratricide chic.” Mallory’s arc teases redemption—or ruin—as she allies uneasily with Kimmie against a common foe: a cartel-linked supplier eyeing the empire’s Black-owned status for laundering.

Beauty in Black | Trang web Netflix chính thức

“Lena’s empire” nods to fan shorthand for Kimmie’s boss-bitch evolution, a character arc that’s propelled Williams from indie darling to Netflix staple. “Kimmie’s not just climbing—she’s rewriting the ladder,” Williams told Essence in a post-trailer exclusive, hinting at her Season 3 expansion into wellness lines and activism. But growth breeds grudge-holders: the trailer spotlights a “list” montage—bullet-pointed suspects like ex-employee turned whistleblower (Amber Reign Smith as scheming niece Tasha), a jilted lover from Kimmie’s past (rumored newcomer Michael B. Jordan in talks for a recurring flame), and even Mallory’s duplicitous mentor (Richard Lawson, chewing scenery as a corrupt judge). One pulse-pounding sequence shows a gala ambush: champagne flutes shatter as masked intruders storm the stage, Kimmie diving for cover while sirens wail. “Everyone wants a piece,” Mallory quips in voiceover, her alliance with Kimmie fracturing over a leaked affair tape. X sleuths dissected it frame-by-frame: @PerryPlotTwists theorized, “That list? Includes a twin reveal for Horace—Season 3 evil uncle incoming!” sparking 20K quote-tweets.

Supporting the leads, the ensemble deepens the dysfunction. Ricco Ross’s Horace haunts via flashbacks, his “accidental” demise fueling conspiracy threads. Crystle Stewart’s Mallory evolves from rival to reluctant ride-or-die, her trailer confession—”I built my life on lies; now it’s crumbling”—hinting at addiction relapses and mommy issues. New blood? Per Variety leaks, SZA guests as a pop-star influencer entangled in a scandalous endorsement, while Bel-Air‘s Coco Jones joins as Kimmie’s savvy cousin, injecting Gen-Z snark into the soapy stew. Perry, pulling double duty as showrunner and scribe for key episodes, amps the Black excellence: diverse writers’ room led by Insecure alum Prentice Penny, and a soundtrack boasting H.E.R. originals alongside trap remixes of ’90s R&B anthems.

Thematically, Season 3 doubles down on Perry’s wheelhouse—ambition’s double-edged sword, sisterhood forged in fire, and the myth of the “strong Black woman” under siege. Critics praise the trailer’s glossy tension: The Hollywood Reporter called it “Scandal meets How to Get Away with Murder, with better hair,” rating the tease 4/5 stars. Fan metrics soar—Season 2’s 95% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes (versus 72% critics) underscores its addictive pull, especially among Black women 18-34, who binge 80% of episodes in 72 hours. On X, #BeautyInBlackS3 trended globally, with @SoapOperaSis gushing, “Trailer got me booking PTO for 2026 already. Kimmie’s fall? Nah, her glow-up’s eternal.”

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Challenges ahead? Perry’s rapid-fire production (Season 3 scripts locked pre-Season 2 airdate) risks plot holes, as some Season 2 detractors griped about “convenient” twists. Yet, his Netflix pact—eight series and films through 2028—ensures Beauty in Black‘s runway. Global rollout teases dubs in 20 languages, targeting APAC markets with beauty brand tie-ins (Fenty whispers?).

As Kimmie’s empire balloons, so does the hit list—traffickers, tycoons, and turncoats plotting her tumble. The trailer ends on a freeze-frame: Kimmie, bloodied but unbowed, toasting the camera: “Fall? Baby, I fly.” With 10-12 episodes eyed (TBA), Season 3 promises Perry’s messiest masterpiece: chaos that captivates, smiles that slay. Stream Seasons 1-2 on Netflix now; the fall—from grace or foes?—awaits. In Beauty in Black, perfection’s just the powder; the real story’s in the cracks.

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