The new drama series ‘Three Women’ premieres Friday night at 10 p.m. ET on STARZ. Watch it for free on Fubo.
STARZ finally premiers the new drama series Three Women on Friday night at 10 p.m. ET. The show features three women from different walks of life who take radical steps to explore their true desires while struggling to emerge from a prison of expectations. A writer, grieving her own loss, persuades each of them to tell her their stories. It is based on a true story. The show starts  Shailene Woodley, Betty Gilpin and DeWanda Wise. The book upon which the show is based was written over a personally tumultuous eight years for the author as she traveled across the United States in a van in an Eat, Pray, Love–esque turning point in her life and career. She was originally seeking stories of married men who cheat on their wives and she ended up writing about three women engaged in different kinds of affairs and their complex sexual and emotional lives. On the show, the author is played by Shailene Woodley (here named Gia), who anchors the story through some narration and episodes from her perspective, according to The Cut website.
How to Watch Three Women: Series Premiere Today:
Game Date: Sept. 13, 2024
Game Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
TV: STARZ
Live stream Three Women: Series Premiere on Fubo:Â Start your free trial today!
It continues that in a sometimes nonlinear fashion, the ten episodes are dynamically structured, shifting between multiple storylines and focusing on one woman’s perspective. The women in question are Lina (Betty Gilpin), Sloane (DeWanda Wise), and Maggie (Gabrielle Creevy). Lina is a suburban Indiana housewife in a sexless marriage who reconnects with her high-school sweetheart; Sloane is a party planner in Rhode Island who swings with her husband (Blair Underwood) and begins to experiment outside of their arrangement; and Maggie is a young adult in North Dakota who has begun unpacking a relationship she had with her teacher in high school.Â
Three Women is obviously focused on sex and desire, hence the penises and the many sex scenes, but it tells equally compelling stories about grief, courage, and how convincing the narratives we tell ourselves about our lives can be.
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