Bravo’s classic ‘Real Housewives of New York City’ is dead

Reality TV

The “Real Housewives of New York City” as we know it is dead, Page Six has learned.

On Sunday, we reported that contract negotiations for the version of the show that featured a beloved cast including Luann de Lesseps, Ramona Singer and Sonja Morgan, had stalled.

Now, we’re told that the talks have officially collapsed, that Bravo has rescinded its offers to the talent and that it currently has no plans put the show — which it rebranded as the “Legacy edition” last year — on the air.

Sources stressed that the network “never says never” and that the show could be revived in some form in the future, much like the “Real Housewives of Miami,” which was pulled from cable in 2013 and brought back eight years later with a mostly new cast on NBC streaming service Peacock.

Meanwhile, the network is forging ahead with the completely revamped “Real Housewives of New York City,” which will star a brand new, ethnically diverse set of women including former J. Crew honcho Jenna Lyons, Sai De Silva and Ubah Hassan.

Real Housewives
The show has featured a gradually evolving cast for 13 seasons, but Bravo decided to start fresh with a brand new cast for the 14th outing.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

We had reported that Bravo was in talks with a group of the “original” cast members, including de Lesseps, Morgan, Jill Zarin, Kelly Bensimon and Dorinda Medley, for what would technically have been season one of “Legacy.” However, Singer and Tinsley Mortimer had bowed out before contract negotiations began in earnest.

But sources said the talent felt they were getting lowball offers from Bravo, and that the network wasn’t willing to guarantee that they would appear in enough episodes per season.

“It’s just not worth it,” sniffed a source close to the stars.

Real Housewives
The new revamped “Real Housewives of New York City” is still expected to air.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Meanwhile, production sources told us that the talent seriously overestimated how much money they’re worth, with one source saying that they seem to think “they should make what the cast of ‘Friends’ made in their heyday.”

Then we’re told that the network officially rescinded the offers by email around 6 p.m. on Monday.

“RHONY” — the second longest-running iteration of Bravo’s “Real Housewives” franchise after its Orange County, Calif., counterpart — debuted in 2008 and aired continuously with a gradually evolving cast for 13 seasons.

RHONY cast
Most of the original “RHONY” cast was meant to come back for “Legacy.”
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via

It began that run with a slate of stars including de Lesseps, Singer, Zarin, Frankel and Alex McCord, and ended it in 2021 with de Lesseps, Singer, Morgan, Leah McSweeney and Eboni K. Williams.

The cast on the last season got along so catastrophically poorly that the network decided not to film a “reunion episode,” which typically concludes every season across the entire franchise. It also decided to scrap the entire cast and start fresh.

The show debuted in 2008.

The show debuted in 2008.


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The Real Housewives
The show debuted in 2008.


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Shortly after, Bravo announced plans to split the “Real Housewives of New York City” into two shows, relaunching “regular” “RHONY” with an all-new cast and launching the “Legacy” edition featuring veteran cast members.

Meanwhile, de Lesseps and Morgan have been taping their own show inspired by the Paris Hilton reality show “The Simple Life,” which aired in the early 2000s.

Bravo declined to comment.

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