The impact of WandaVision on the wider MCU was pretty vast. It debuted a litany of new MCU heroes as well as the instantly likable MCU villain, Agatha Harkness. Agatha proved to be so popular, in fact, that Marvel Studios saw fit to bequeath the character with her own spinoff series in 2024’s Agatha All Along, with WandaVision creator Jac Schaeffer back at the helm. As such, Agatha All Along would become the spiritual sequel to WandaVision, and it fell to one of its own beloved stars to clarify why WandaVision season 2 never happened.
Patti Lupone’s Comments About WandaVision Season 2 Underline Why It Was Best To Keep The Show At A Single Season
Jac Schaeffer Asserted She Doesn’t Do Second Seasons
Patti LuPone portrays Lilia Calderu in Agatha All Along, the divination witch who stars in one of the best episodes of television that Marvel has ever created. Agatha All Along episode 7 ends with Lilia’s heartrending death in an epic moment of self-sacrifice. LuPone revealed in an interview with Andy Cohen on his Sirius XM podcast that Jac Schaeffer approached her to inform her of Lilia’s upcoming death, to which LuPone responded that she had hoped to work on a second season. Schaeffer replied “I don’t do second seasons,” before revealing she turned down WandaVision season 2.
“Jac Schaeffer, the creator, came into my trailer and she said, ‘Patti, I’m just here to tell you that Lilia’s going to die,’ and I went, ‘But I wanted a second season…’ [Schaeffer] said, ‘I don’t do second seasons. She said, ‘They wanted me to do a second season of Wanda Vision and I didn’t.’ She said, ‘There’s too much to write,’ so she does one-offs and I’m really hoping and praying that someday I get to work with her again because she’s magic.”
I think Schaeffer makes a good point. The introduction of so many strong characters and the progress of the Multiverse Saga’s overarching narrative make focusing on just one character for multiple seasons practically impossible and difficult to justify. While Agatha All Along was initially met with an air of trepidation due to the relative obscurity of its stars, I think we can all agree that it turned out to be an exceptionally valuable addition to the MCU. WandaVision, meanwhile, was a perfectly rounded story for which a second season could only be justified with a particularly strong vision.
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Jac Schaeffer also worked on the stories for Captain Marvel and Black Widow, though is uncredited for the former.
WandaVision director, Matt Shackman, has also gone on to make huge contributions to the MCU. After cutting his teeth on WandaVision, Shackman returned to the MCU to direct The Fantastic Four: First Steps, which is due to be released on July 25 this year. This has helped to boost my confidence in the highly anticipated Fantastic Four debut based on the proven quality of Shackman’s past work in WandaVision. There is immense pressure on Shackman to get this particular project right, but I think WandaVision is precisely why Marvel Studios considered him the right person for the job.
I’m Not Sure WandaVision Season 2 Could Have Ever Lived Up To The First Season
WandaVision Was A Self-Contained Story
The heart-wrenching finale in which Wanda relinquishes the family she created out of desperation would have been significantly diminished with a second season that would presumably revisit the same themes.
It’s also hard to see how WandaVision could continue its television-themed throughline after the WandaVision season finale. The heart-wrenching finale in which Wanda relinquishes the family she created out of desperation would have been significantly diminished with a second season that would presumably revisit the same themes. Instead, I think the current structure of treating shows like Agatha All Along and Vision’s upcoming solo series as sequels is a far better way of progressing the stories of WandaVision‘s main characters.