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'Outlander' Season 5: Everything We Know So Far


Outlander has only been off the air for three months, but we’re already counting down the days until season five graces our TV screens. Fans will have to wait a little while before that happens, but that doesn’t mean we can’t start getting excited about what’s to come—and start figuring out what we can expect from the the time-traveling drama’s new season. (Also, will we get more steamy sex scenes between Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan)? Just asking.) Here’s what we know so far about Outlander‘s upcoming fifth season.

Season 5 has officially started shooting. Actress Sophie Skelton, who plays Brianna Randall Fraser, shared a behind-the-scenes photo on Instagram, confirming the series has begun filming.

On March 18, Balfe also shared a look at the show’s new set. “And so it begins,” she wrote on Instagram. “Season 5 (yep that’s 1, 2, 3, 4..FIVE ? ) prep time !!!! Excuse the shrill shouting but I was very very excited to catch @jongarysteele on the incredible new set he and his team of genius artisans have built !!! Get READY!!”

Stephen Bonnet will most probably be back to wreak more havoc. Actor Ed Speleers, who plays the villainous role, may return this season: Fans believe he survived the prison explosion in Wilmington. Plus, according to the book, the Frasers will be spending a lot of time trying to find and kill him—again.

Aimee Spinks/Starz

Aimee Spinks/Starz

Fans will get to see Roger Wakefield evolve as a character. Actor Richard Rankin recently told Fox that his character will “evolve” as a new husband and father this season.

The best news of all: It won’t end with season five. Outlander has already been picked up for a sixth season.Now-former Starz CEO Chris Albrecht confirmed that Outlander had been renewed for a sixth back in May 2018. They will both feature 12 episodes each, as opposed to Seasons 2-4, which had 13 episodes.

The upcoming season will most likely be based on book five in Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series, The Fiery Cross. “Every year we approach it fresh,” executive producer Ronald D. Moore told Entertainment Weekly last year. “Should we keep it a book a season? We’ve done that up until now. But we’ve talked about splitting books, and we’ve talked about combining them. We want to be free in the writers’ room to pick and choose and do what feels most comfortable that year.”



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Why There Were Fewer Sex Scenes in 'Outlander' Season 4


Obviously, Outlander is more than just steamy sex scenes. But at its core, this is a show about Jamie and Claire’s relationship—and their intimate moments, sexual or not, are important to fans. It’s also important that this series consistently shows female pleasure and consent as sexy, as we’ve pointed out before.

But season four, which just wrapped, was largely focused on setting up new characters and storylines for the series. Sure, the couple made a new home for themselves in colonial America, but most of our time was spent diving deeper into Brianna and Roger’s story. While it’s exciting to see where that goes, it meant less screen time for Jamie and Claire, and the intimate moments we did get were often cut short, fading to black before things heated up.

For many fans, this was frustrating. “The show is brimming with adventures, cliffhangers, great characters and performances, social commentary, and lots of sentimentality,” Andrée Poppleton wrote on Outlandercast.com. “It has lost touch, however, with the thrust and depth (puns intended) of the writings of Diana Gabaldon, who shows us a relationship like nothing we have seen before on television—an egalitarian relationship where the joy, intensity, fun, playfulness, and excitement of being a couple never stops for Claire and Jamie, despite the passing of years and all the dramas that develop and revolve around them.”

Mark Mainz

We asked co–executive producer Maril Davis about this shift at the Television Critics Association winter press tour. “I think every season is different,” she tells Glamour. “This season we were introducing more characters, and there was a lot of story to get in. We’ve always talked about the sex scenes—we love them too—but they have to be organic to the story.”

Sometimes, she says, the story just doesn’t allow for as many slowdown times—intimate moments between Jamie and Claire, specifically—that fans can get in the books. “I do anticipate a return, hopefully, to that next season a little more,” she says. “Every season has its different storylines and where we’re going. It can’t always re-create the first season, which was very special, but it just has to be within the story and feel like it’s organic. That’s something we work on, and the actors work on. It’s a collaboration.”

As a fan herself, Davis says she totally gets that a fade-to-black in the middle of a sex scene might not be satisfying for some fans. But “this is the fifth season, and we’re trying to find those intimate moments without always having to show everything and putting actors in that position. But I get it! I want everyone to be satisfied.”

The next season will start production some time this year, though she won’t reveal exact timing yet. As for the storyline, Davis says they hear truly every kind of request from fans. “It’s hard to please everyone,” she jokes. But production knows the “heart and soul” of the story is Claire and Jamie: “We never forget that.”

Reporting by Jessica Radloff. Anna Moeslein is a senior editor at Glamour. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @annamoeslein.



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The 'Outlander' Costume Designer Just Revealed an Easter Egg You Probably Missed


Outlander season four introduced a lot of big changes for Claire and Jamie—a home at Fraser’s Ridge, a reunion with their daughter Brianna, and even a new villain in Stephen Bonnet, to name just a few. But there was another, more subtle shift happening onscreen that might have escaped your notice: the character’s costumes. As Nina Ayres, the costume designer alongside Terry Dresbach, tells Glamour, Jamie, Claire, and their loved ones are literally in a new world. That means new cultural influences, new weather elements, even new fabrics that they wouldn’t have known or used before. “We’re making sure we’re telling the story as to where those clothes might have come from,” she explains. “Because they are really out in the wilderness, there’s barely anywhere to get anything.”

Oh, and several of these outfits had to be designed while keeping in mind what a twentieth-century woman would think an eighteenth-century outfit looks like. That’s a lot of work and research, but Ayres and her team pulled it off. They even found time to sneak in a subtle callback or two. Here, she explains.

Glamour: This season mostly takes place in colonial America. What was it like prepping for that?

Nina Ayres: The most important thing this season has been to try and establish that new world, what it was about eighteenth-century America that defined it, and then finding those key pieces to introduce to our characters. We started on Wilmington, in North Carolina, and did a lot of research into what, exactly, those elements would be. Really, it’s the mix of cultures. We looked into the cultural and traditional costumes of Europe, where [most of] the settlers would have come from. Then mix that with the Native Americans who were obviously there, as well as previous settlers. Then [we thought about] the practicalities of the terrain. What sort of practical garments they would have worn?

Glamour: For Claire, were there any specific challenges?

NA: It’s always hard because you want to make sure that nothing is just emerging from out of nowhere. So you start off with a question as to where her costumes would have come from. Then you’ve always got the fact that she’s a twentieth-century woman, so practicality is her thing, as well as trying to blend in with everybody else. She doesn’t want to stand out too much. And she’s not a very frivolous dresser, so one of the elements we brought in were block-printed cottons from India, which were exported to the Colonies at the time. We kept a silhouette that people understand as Claire’s, something she’s used to wearing, but we use linens more than wools [from Scotland]. Linens were a big thing, and generally used in warmer climates.

Claire (Caitriona Balfe) at Fraser’s Ridge on Outlander

Aimee Spinks

I think the most interesting thing was working out what she might have made herself when they get to Fraser’s Ridge. She’s more layered this season than we’ve ever seen her before. We used rabbit skins and things like that—that’s what they’re eating all of the time, so it’s what she has access to. We made quite a few garments that are simple, as if she has made them herself. We used the most basic techniques while [thinking about whether] it’s a practical thing that would keep her warm, or it’s waterproof, or it’s what she’s actually doing in these things.

Glamour: Whereas with someone like Jocasta, her costumes might reflect her wealth and status?

NA: For Jocasta, we made her wardrobe quite old-fashioned. She’s a little bit of a relic from the past. And Claire doesn’t particularly enjoy being with Jocasta, or at River Run. Jocasta is getting gowns made for Claire, so they’re not…she’s being forced to wear things she wouldn’t generally choose herself. But she’s just playing the part.



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'Outlander' Has Officially Been Renewed for Seasons 5 and 6


Fans of Outlander can rest easy: “Droughtlander” is almost over. Starz announced on Wednesday, May 9, that the fourth season of the hit period drama will return in November 2018. The good news doesn’t stop there, either: The show has officially been renewed for seasons five and six, as well. Cut to me sweating bullets over the saucy sex scenes to come between Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan).

“Fans can rest assured their beloved Claire and Jamie will be back facing new challenges, adversaries, and adventures in seasons five and six as we delve into American history and continue the story of the Frasers as they settle in the New World,” Starz CEO Chris Albrecht said in a press release.

Outlander has been a runaway hit for Starz. Based on the novel series by Diana Gabaldon, the show centers on a 1940s woman, Claire, who travels back in time to the eighteenth century and falls in love with a man named Jamie. The only catch, however, is that she also has a husband in her present day: Frank (Tobias Menzies).

That’s the basic synopsis of season one, but the story has advanced quite a bit since then. (Spoiler warning!) Frank actually died in a car accident during season three, and Claire returned to Jamie in the eighteenth century only to find that he’s remarried. A plot to pay off his current wife ended up with Jamie’s nephew Ian being kidnapped by pirates. Jamie and Claire saved him—only to then shipwreck in colonial Georgia, which is where season four will pick up.

Outlander is quite famous for its sex scenes, but Balfe told Glamour last year the show isn’t as steamy as people think. “It’s funny, because there’s probably less sex in our show than people think,” the actress told us. “It’s just when we do it, we try to empower these two characters to represent this metaphysical and all-encompassing love, so we get branded as ‘It’s so sexy!’ But if you look at the amount of episodes that it features in, it’s not in every single one.”

Regardless, additional seasons of Outlander is great news. At the very least, this means more scenes with Jamie’s signature smolder.

Is it November yet?

Related Stories:

I Was Obsessed With Outlander—so I Found My Own Love Story in Scotland

Watch the First Outlander Screen Test and Marvel at Jamie and Claire’s Instant Chemistry

The Best ‘Outlander’ Sex Scenes





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How the Creator of 'Vida' Found Her Own Love Story Through 'Outlander'


Tanya Saracho loves an epic love story. The creator, showrunner, and executive producer of the new STARZ series Vida, which premieres Sunday, May 6, loves to write them, loves to watch them, and loves to be inspired by them. She just didn’t expect to be the subject of one.

That’s not to say the 42-year-old from Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Mexico didn’t have happy relationships—but she knew romance rarely, if ever, plays out like the Hugh Grant rom coms she grew up on. As a queer woman of color, it was hard to find any love story that didn’t cater to the straight male gaze.

That’s why Saracho—who has also written for How to Get Away With Murder and Looking—was drawn to Outlander, the romantic drama about a woman, Claire, who travels back in time and meets the love of her life, a Highland warrior named Jamie. “It’s so female gaze, ” she says. “That sex scene where Claire takes Jamie’s virginity? It’s like, when have you seen it from that perspective?”

Saracho’s appreciation—OK, obsession—of Outlander grew as the series went on. “I was obsessed with everything about it—the stories, the way it looked,” she explains. “I followed each and every writer on Twitter. I followed the producers. I was like a freaking stalker…a fangirl, you know.” So in 2014, after Saracho’s father disowned her and wouldn’t let her attend her grandmother’s funeral, she relied on the show to take her mind off her family issues. “I was so sad,” she says. “At the time, I was thinking, ‘Where am I going to go for Christmas now?'”

The answer came easily: Scotland. “I thought, you know what, I’m going to go to Scotland, and I’m going to find my own Outlander,” she says. “I had become obsessed, so I booked a Christmas and New Year’s trip without knowing anyone [there]. I didn’t even know where I was going to stay.”

At the time, Saracho was working on Looking in San Francisco and had to answer to some skeptical colleagues. (“They were like, ‘You’re going to Scotland by yourself for Christmas? That’s the saddest thing ever!'”) One of those coworkers was Raul Castillo, who played Richie Donado on the show and was Saracho’s first high school boyfriend. He told her not to go to Scotland by herself, but she felt drawn to the country. “He said, ‘For a stupid TV show?'” Saracho remembers. “And I said, ‘It’s not stupid. It’s the best show ever.” Wanting to have a clean slate, she even broke up with the woman she was seeing before she left for the trip.

Saracho had no definite plans for Scotland—except for one: “I had actually met Sam Heughan [before I left for Scotland],” she says. “My friend called him in for a casting meeting, and I happened to be there. I tried with all my might not to say, ‘Oh my God, Outlander is my everything,’ so I was just like, ‘I really like your show.’ He was so kind and gave me his info. He said, ‘We’ll have a wee dram [a shot of Scottish whiskey] when you get there!’ I was thinking, Great! I’m going to have a true Outlander experience.”

But when she arrived in the country, she ended up blowing off Heughan completely. “It’s crazy,” she explains. “When I got to Scotland, I signed up on a site called Meetup.com. It’s like these group things you can do—a poetry reading, a hike, whatever. I signed up for it all and asked somebody in the group if they could help me with my train itinerary. I was feeling so lost that first day and thinking, ‘Am I going to have to eat every day by myself? What have I done?’ One person wrote back—his name was Scruffy Scot—and was really polite and helpful. He didn’t have a picture next to his name, and he was so formal in his writing that I just assumed he was this older man.”

Turns out, “Scruffy Scot” wasn’t an older man; she discovered he’s the same age, had a career in IT, and is named Colin Stubbs. “Without knowing anything, I said to him, ‘This is a weird thing to ask, but if you want to have coffee in a public place, let me know.’ He said yes, and I thought, ‘OK, great, one hour, a coffee with a Scottish person! This is fantastic because my wee dram with Sam was not until the following week in Glasgow. I had nothing else planned.”

But that one hour coffee with “Scruffy Scot”—or Jon Snow’s doppelgänger, as Saracho calls him—turned into six. “I didn’t let him talk,” she says, laughing. “I literally didn’t shut up. He has no game. He was shy, and I just felt really safe. I kept texting Raul [in the states] and was like, ‘Do you think I should go have dinner with him?’ and he said, ‘Are you crazy? You’re going to get raped and murdered in a castle dungeon!'”

But Saracho didn’t take her friend’s advice. When he offered to drive her to Glasgow, instead of taking the train, she took him up on the offer. He soon became the sounding board she had been searching for. “I started bawling in his car,” she says. “Everything around me was so beautiful—the trees looked like lavender cotton candy because of the snow, and I started thinking about how it was almost Christmas and I wasn’t with my family and my dad had just ousted me.” Stubbs reached over to grab Saracho’s hand and kept driving without saying a word. “That was the first time I was like, ‘Whoa,'” Saracho says. “It was so soothing and comfortable. He just let me cry.”

Saracho says she and Stubbs developed a deep connection, but it wasn’t sexual: In fact, throughout the entire car ride she kept referencing her past relationships with women. “I hadn’t had sex with a cisgender male in five years, so I was like, ‘I’m sorry, but I don’t want to go there. I don’t know what that is anymore,'” she says. “He was just so happy to be at the party, you know? He was like, ‘I didn’t even know this was going to happen.” Stubbs was patient with Saracho. “We took our time,” she says. “I got to know him, and he got to know me.”

What was supposed to be a two-week trip ended up turning into a six-week stay. Three weeks in, Saracho met Stubbs’ family. “I was like, ‘That’s really quick [to meet someone’s family].’ But he is so innocent! He was like, ‘I don’t understand, quick for what?’ They’re the loveliest humans and so polite and nurturing. I fell in love with them so deep.”

Eventually, Saracho returned to the U.S.—but Stubbs came to California for long visits. “He stayed one time for nine months—six months of that because I got a spinal infection and almost died,” she says. “This will tell you what a [good] soul he is: He literally bathed me [daily], wiped my ass, and quit his job to take care of me. He tells me loves me all the time, but he has shown me he loves me more than anything. I realized that no one had done those things for me before. His soul is amazing, and he’s so pure.”

Saracho still can’t believe this is her life. “I’m like, ‘What the f-ck is this?’ I mean, we’re just endgame,” she says. “This is it, you know what I mean? The fact that he quit his job to take care of me? There’s no going back from that. We’re bonded. He saved my life.”

In the three and a half years since their first meeting, Saracho and Stubbs talk or FaceTime every day and consistently make plans to see each other. They hope to eventually live together in the same city, same house. “I never wanted to be married,” Saracho says. “That was never a thing for me. But now it’s like, OK, we have to do it. When we do, he has to wear a kilt.”

As for Outlander, Stubbs had never heard of the show before he met Saracho. “I made him, poor guy—and his family—watch the first season,” she says. “He tells me he likes the show. I hope he’s just not telling me that. If he tells me he doesn’t like it, it might be over.”

Now, of course, when Saracho—and Stubbs—watch the show, the promos for Vida run next to it. “The fact that I have a show on STARZ, it’s crazy. It’s insane,” Saracho says. “When Vida got the green light, STARZ sent me this picnic basket of Jamie Fraser red wine and all these Outlander things that I’ll never open because it’s like my sacred thing.”

The same could be said of Saracho’s journey with Stubbs. Her friends think she should write her own love story next, but Saracho’s not sure. (“Everyone says I have to make a movie, but I’m so close to it that I don’t know.”) For the time being, she just wants to live in the present and enjoy working on Vida. “Everything’s been a dream. You can pinch me. It’s just exciting that we get to tell this story,” she says.

Of course, maybe one day she’ll also tell her story with Stubbs. “I feel like I was called to Scotland,” she says. “It was truly a gut feeling. The universe was being a puppeteer, like, ‘You and you will end up meeting.’ It’s just crazy that way.”



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'Outlander' Still Hasn't Been Renewed for Seasons 5 and 6—but Don't Freak Out Yet


Although we already knew that season four of Outlander was coming in 2018, the new year has finally arrived, and we still don’t an exact date for when we should expect the new episodes. Even worse, we don’t entirely know if this is the end of Jamie and Claire: No official renewals have been announced for the show, leaving us wondering if season four will really be the last we see of them (say it’s not so!). But on Friday, we got some news that’s making us feel a tiny bit better.

At the Television Critics Association Press Tour, the Starz CEO himself, Chris Albrecht, dropped a little hint about the future of the show, and it’s having us feel all sorts of optimistic. (Of course, keep in mind that Starz hasn’t confirmed the future seasons just yet, so nothing’s official until it’s, well, official.)

“I wouldn’t worry too much about that,” he said when asked about why renewals for seasons five and six haven’t been officially announced. “There are 10 books, and we are having very productive conversations about the future of the show.”

Each season so far has loosely lined up with the plot of its matching installment in author Diana Gabaldon’s book series, which means that if we’re on season-four-book-four, and there are 10 books—well, it’s safe to say there could be a lot more of the duo and their adventures ahead.

Albrecht says his main concern is with how much they’re asking of Outlander stars Caitriona Balfe and Sam Heughan.

“We have joined the legions of fans of Outlander around the world. Our biggest concern is making sure that we don’t kill Caitriona and Sam along the way,” he said, referring to how hard both actors work, not the million brushes with death their characters experience each season. “The two of them are fantastic and deserve every bit of the accolades they have received.” (Like, say, Balfe’s Golden Globe nomination for her work on season 3.)

Those who just cannot wait for the fourth season to start will want to clear their calendars Sunday evening (January 14), when Starz airs an exclusive scene from it at 10 P.M. ET. (So…that’ll hold us over for maybe a week or so?) Until the new season’s actual premiere, we’ll be rereading Outlander recaps and possibly definitely revisiting the best sex scenes from the last three seasons.

Related Stories:
Caitriona Balfe From ‘Outlander’ Is Engaged
Caitriona Balfe Says There’s Less Sex on ‘Outlander’ Than You Think—and That’s a Good Thing
New ‘Outlander’ Trailer Teases All the Sex and (Maybe) Deaths Coming This Season



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