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Will There Be a ‘Night Manager’ Season 3?

We might also see more from Roxy, aka Camila Morrone – however, based on her ending which saw her jetting off to Miami, it’s unclear whether her particular arc has wrapped.

Writer David Farr told Variety: “My instinct is that I’m satisfied with that resolution and Roxana’s journey. But the honest truth is that we are still writing the third season as we speak.”

It’s also unlikely that we’ll see more from Diego Santos as Marin or Olivia Coleman as Angela after their characters’ tragic ends in the finale.

Image may contain Tom Hiddleston Olivia Colman Adult and Person

BBC/Des Willie

When will The Night Manager 3 be released?

The good news is, we probably won’t have to wait another decade for more Pine.

As Farr confirmed to Radio Times, “we’re not going to have this whopping gap again.” Phew.

However, don’t start holding your breath just yet – chances are, it will be at least a year or even two before season 3 hits our screens. After all, the scrips are still underway and, you know, the whole things still has to be cast and filmed.

What will the new episodes be about?

A whole lot happened in that season 2 finale – but it also left plenty of questions unanswered. Who killed Angela Burr? And, perhaps more importantly, why? And what was her mysterious voicenote about? Is there another Roper plot to uncover? Also, what is up with Mayra? Is Jonathan Pine going to make and take on Roper once more?

All of this would be a great jumping off point for the third season. And by the sounds of things, all of these questions will probably be answered (at least in part) when the show returns.

And it will probably all start with Pine learning of Angela’s tragic death – and, undoubtedly, doing somethign about it. “[Angela’s] death will absolutely figure very strongly as an ignition point for the next season, because we’re going to follow on quicker this time,” Farr told Radio Times. “There will be consequences.”

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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