Zendaya is the definition of black girl magic, and many people will agree with that. Starting her career as a child star, the 25-year-old has done more than beat people’s expectations, and she’s done it again with Euphoria.
When HBO’s Euphoria premiered in June 2019, barely anyone knew that the show would become a generational staple. The show not only won the hearts of several Gen-Zers, but it also proved once and for all that Zendaya is a method actor. Playing the role of ‘Rue Bennet’ in the critically acclaimed series put the actress in a new light. It was a type of character she had never played before – a drug-addicted teenager.
In her previous appearances in TV shows, she had maintained the golden-child character, and the drastic change from that to a struggling teenager was as brilliant as it was shocking. Sam Levinson’s ground-breaking hit series saw a teenage addict, Rue, try to find hope while balancing the pressures of love, loss and addiction.
At the end of season one, Zendaya had broken out from the ‘child star’ category and cemented herself as an A-list actress. She impressed critics so much on the season two preview that Mashable’s Alison Foreman wrote, ‘Zendaya is at a career-best with a performance so dazzling they might as well engrave her trophies now’. Interestingly, about two years before that article, the actress had won the 2019 People’s Choice Award for ‘Favorite Drama TV Star’ and later the 2020 Black Reel Award for ‘Outstanding Actress, Drama Series.
Earlier in August 2019, when the Guardian’s Rebecca Nicholson wrote, “the former Disney star Zendaya is reinvented as the self-destructive, self-loathing Rue, in what is a truly astonishing, mesmerising performance, upending every expectation of what she could do”, it was as if she could foresee the awards pouring in. Zendaya won the 2020 Primetime Emmy Award for ‘Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for the same role (which saw her breaking the record for the youngest ever actress to scoop the title).
Perhaps, it’s a little unfair to heap all the praises on the actress when the show is a brilliant work of art. With the help of a fantastic crew, Euphoria creator Sam Levinson put together a cast list that reads like a who’s-who of rising young stars. Returning faces for season 2 include Hunter Schafer as Jules, Sydney Sweeney, Algee Smith, Storm Reid, Jacob Elordi, Alexa Demie, Barbie Ferreira, Austin Abrams, Maude Apatow, and Eric Dane.
The show is highly controversial, but even at that, it has developed quite a dedicated fan base for all the right reasons. The debut review in the Guardian succinctly explains this. Nicholson opines, “Euphoria will certainly not appeal to all tastes, but it is far less brash than it has been made out to be. There are deep sophistications hidden within its more straightforwardly angsty digressions.”
Euphoria also won the 2020 Emmys for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics and Contemporary Makeup. The two-part-special bridging the pandemic-enforced gap between seasons received nominations for a Peabody Award and three 2021 Emmys for Cinematography, Make-up and Costume.
Nearly two years after the 2019-2020 Euphoria two-part special, the show is back for a second season, and it’s as risque as ever but even more popular. Euphoria topped multiple “the most anticipated shows of 2022” lists, from Complex to Esquire, Mashable to Polygon. The Season 2 trailer hit over 1 million views on YouTube within 12 hours when it dropped at the end of November last year. The first episode of its long-awaited second season is streaming on Showmax, with new episodes coming express from the US every Monday.
Season 2 promises to be more dramatic than season one, and reviews are already claiming the show is more shocking in its sophomore season than it ever was in the debut, which is saying a lot. Even though we expect more drama from all the characters, there’s probably a rough rollercoaster of a season ahead, especially for Rue and Jules.
Even Zendaya tries as much as possible to prepare fans for the incoming onslaught of complicated emotions in an interview with Extra TV. She says, “I think, when we’re heading into this second season, she (Rue) is trying to be a functioning drug addict… And I think we all know that’s not going to work, and it’s not going to last, and it’s probably going to come to a very painful end. But that’s something that she has to find and learn on her own, no matter how painful it is to have to watch her deal with. But I want to maintain this sense of hope for her future and for the things she deserves in her life. She is worthy of a beautiful, beautiful future; I think she just has to feel that.”
The first four episodes of the highly anticipated second season of Euphoria are currently available on Showmax, with new episodes coming express from the US every Monday.


