Natasha Lyonneis bending more space and time for season 2 ofRussian Doll.Netflix released the firsttrailerfor the upcoming second installment of the sci-fi dramedy, which premieres April 20, showing Nadia Volvokov (Lyonne) stumble into another adventure, this one taking her back in time to 1980s New York City.“What is this? Some kind of ’80s flash mob?” Nadia asks as she wakes up on a graffiti-covered subway car, before realizing what decade she’s really in.The trailer also sees the return of Charlie Barnett as her time-warping companion Alan Zaveri. “The universe finally found something worse than death. I broke time,” Nadia tells him. “Do I need to be worried?” Alan responds.Nadia’s journey involves a family’s stolen gold, a jaunt to World War II and a visit to a psych ward, complete with returning costar Greta Lee as Maxine andSchitt’s CreekstarAnnie Murphy, whojoins the castwith season 2.NetflixFans of the series will remember that season 1 saw Nadia stuck in an inexplicable time loop, continuously reliving her 36th birthday just to die at the end of the day and start all over. Although she finds solace in Alan, who’s also stuck reliving the same day, their loop continues getting more and more bizarre until they can figure out how to stop it.The show premiered in February 2019 and itwas renewed for season 2that June. It’s since gone onto win threeEmmy Awardsout of 13 nominations, which included outstanding comedy series and outstanding lead actress in a comedy series for Lyonne, 43.Lyonne, who also landed an outstanding writing for a comedy series nomination alongside co-creators Leslye Headland andAmy Poehler, previouslytold PEOPLEit was “creatively affirming more than anything” to be recognized for their work.RELATED VIDEO: Natasha Lyonne Clarifies the Story Behind the Netflix Orgy That Almost Happened!“Frankly, this is the first show that I’ve really created and seen through from inception to color correction,” she said in 2019. “The idea that this was well received instead of alienating for audiences, really makes me encouraged to continue along those lines to want to ask big questions about what it all means and what we’re all doing here.“Season 2 ofRussian Dollpremieres April 20 on Netflix.
Natasha Lyonneis bending more space and time for season 2 ofRussian Doll.
Netflix released the firsttrailerfor the upcoming second installment of the sci-fi dramedy, which premieres April 20, showing Nadia Volvokov (Lyonne) stumble into another adventure, this one taking her back in time to 1980s New York City.
“What is this? Some kind of ’80s flash mob?” Nadia asks as she wakes up on a graffiti-covered subway car, before realizing what decade she’s really in.
The trailer also sees the return of Charlie Barnett as her time-warping companion Alan Zaveri. “The universe finally found something worse than death. I broke time,” Nadia tells him. “Do I need to be worried?” Alan responds.
Nadia’s journey involves a family’s stolen gold, a jaunt to World War II and a visit to a psych ward, complete with returning costar Greta Lee as Maxine andSchitt’s CreekstarAnnie Murphy, whojoins the castwith season 2.
Netflix

Fans of the series will remember that season 1 saw Nadia stuck in an inexplicable time loop, continuously reliving her 36th birthday just to die at the end of the day and start all over. Although she finds solace in Alan, who’s also stuck reliving the same day, their loop continues getting more and more bizarre until they can figure out how to stop it.
The show premiered in February 2019 and itwas renewed for season 2that June. It’s since gone onto win threeEmmy Awardsout of 13 nominations, which included outstanding comedy series and outstanding lead actress in a comedy series for Lyonne, 43.
Lyonne, who also landed an outstanding writing for a comedy series nomination alongside co-creators Leslye Headland andAmy Poehler, previouslytold PEOPLEit was “creatively affirming more than anything” to be recognized for their work.
RELATED VIDEO: Natasha Lyonne Clarifies the Story Behind the Netflix Orgy That Almost Happened!
“Frankly, this is the first show that I’ve really created and seen through from inception to color correction,” she said in 2019. “The idea that this was well received instead of alienating for audiences, really makes me encouraged to continue along those lines to want to ask big questions about what it all means and what we’re all doing here.”
Season 2 ofRussian Dollpremieres April 20 on Netflix.
source: people.com