'The White Lotus' casts Max Greenfield, Kumail Nanjiani, more for Season 4
The drama anthology series The White Lotus has added new faces into its much-awaited fourth season.
Deadline reported that the series will see Max Greenfield (New Girl), Kumail Nanjiani (Eternals), Chloe Bennet (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.), Charlie Hall (The Sex Lives of College Girls) and Jarrad Paul (Free Bert) joining the growing ensemble cast of the hit HBO series.
According to the news outlet, Greenfield and Nanjiani are rumored to have a central role in "two of the meatiest recurring parts next season."
With this, the new cast members now join the likes of Helena Bonham Carter, Vincent Cassel, Steve Coogan, Sandra Bernhard, Alexander Ludwig, Chris Messina, Ari Graynor, AJ Michalka, Nadia Tereszkiewicz, Corentin Fila, Dylan Ennis, Caleb Jonte Edwards, and Marissa Long.
As the season is still in its early stages of production, more details about the plot are still under wraps, but it will follow “a new group of White Lotus hotel guests and employees over the span of a week."
Previously, it was reported that the fourth season will be filmed in France at a 19th-century palace-turned-luxury hotel called the Château de La Messardière in Saint-Tropez on the Côte d’Azur.
The Mediterranean-style villa features a sprawling swimming pool in its central courtyard. Rooms are in the main château or surrounding villas, decorated in bright pastels with terracotta floors and canopy beds. Sizes range from 25 to 40 square meters, with terraces or balconies overlooking gardens, vineyards, or the sea.
Aside from the hotel, the story will also reportedly unfold along the French Riviera, and some scenes are also shot at a hotel in Paris.
The last season was set in the Four Seasons Resort in Thailand. It was starred by Walton Goggins, Aimee Lou Wood, Carrie Coon, Michelle Monaghan, Leslie Bibb, Jason Isaacs, Patrick Schwarzenegger, and more.
Each season of The White Lotus follows a new set of affluent guests and hotel staff in its titular resort, where seemingly idyllic getaways slowly unravel into chaos.
