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The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3 is dropping this week in the UK – here's where to watch

The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3 is dropping this week in the UK – here's where to watch

Independent14-07-2025
It's been two years since season two of The Summer I Turned Pretty wrapped up on an emotional cliffhanger. The last series, following the book's storyline, ends with Belly (Lola Tung) choosing to be with Jeremiah (Gavin Casalegno), leaving Conrad (Christopher Briney) brokenhearted – delighting some viewers and devastating others in what has been a very divisive Fisher brothers love triangle. Wondering what happens now? We're about to find out.
Luckily for us, we won't have to wait too long to get our fix, with the third and final series premiering worldwide on 16 July. It's yet to be announced whether the entire last season will be aired all at once or if we'll need to wait for weekly episodes as before. We could even see the series split into two parts. What we do know though is there will be 11 hour-long episodes in the final season, giving us a few more episodes than both the first and second seasons. You can trust us to bring you the latest details on episode air dates as soon as we hear.
Prime Video released a much-anticipated trailer that features Taylor Swift's hits. At the beginning of the trailer, we see Jeremiah and Belly announce their engagement, but over the course of the three-minute preview, it seems Conrad will cause as much drama as the previous seasons. It seems we're in for a treat.
As you wait for the 16 July release date, you can catch up on the past two seasons of The Summer I Turned Pretty. You will need an Amazon Prime membership to do so, it costs £9.99 per month, but, if you haven't been an Amazon Prime member in the last year, you can sign up for a 30-day free trial, which comes with a whole range of other Amazon Prime benefits.
What is ' The Summer I Turned Pretty' season 3 about?
Without giving away too much, Prime Video's official synopsis for the final season of The Summer I Turned Pretty reads 'It's the end of her junior year of college, and Belly's looking forward to another summer in Cousins with her soulmate, Jeremiah. Her future seems set until some core-shaking events bring her first love Conrad back into her life. Now on the brink of adulthood, Belly finds herself at a crossroads and must decide which brother has her heart. Summer will never be the same…'
If the latest trailer, released on 12 June, is anything to go by, we can expect plenty of happy memories at Cousins Beach, tears, fist fights, important decisions, and a wedding. But, who will Belly choose... Are you team Conrad or Jeremiah?
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After shooting that scene, Christopher Plummer said to me 'That went really well, excellent!' 'People always ask about the German Luger I had in that scene, but I don't have it. I should have just stuck it in my pocket. The only memento I have is my script and a letter from Rogers & Hammerstein's production company thanking and congratulating me for being a part of the movie.' Daniel won't reveal much he got for his significant contribution, but says: 'At the time I thought I was well-paid, and it's nice to still get residual cheques for something I did 60 years ago, but when you think of the greatness of the movie it was not much. It's still in the thousands, but you'd think hundreds of thousands when you think of what maybe some of the others get.' Most juvenile leads in major movies would make themselves very available for subsequent interest, particularly in Hollywood. However, Daniel did nothing of the sort. 'After I did The Sound Of Music, I went with friends from my hometown into the Marine Corps. I didn't even go to the Premiere as I was in boot camp. The first time I saw the movie I was in uniform at a theatre in New York. My marine buddies were beside themselves that I was in this film and I was very happy that it had come together as it did. After that the drill instructors called me Private Hollywood!' Although Daniel remained in the US and wasn't called to combat, he says: 'I was on six months active duty and five year reserve. I always tell everybody 'If you don't like me as a Nazi, the greatest punishment I could have had was to join the Marine Corps!' On quitting the Marines, Daniel toured with dance legend Juliet Prowse (who was best-known for being engaged to Frank Sinatra and co-starring in GI Blues with Elvis Presley), and in 1977 he played Gene Kelly in the MGM Grand's Las Vegas production of Hallelujah Hollywood. 'It gets a little old doing the same show night after night. But I got to hang with The Rat Pack in Vegas, and the one I liked the best was Sammy Davis Jr.' Since 1982 Daniel, who has three sons, has lived in North Carolina, and since 1992 he's been wed to wife No.3, Tarealia, who has three daughters he considers his own. 'We live in a gorgeous two-storey house on 14 acres with the room I teach in (on a big white grand piano) deliberately shaped like a gazebo, and there's a beautiful pool in front.' Daniel has been teaching 'voice' for several decades, during which his performing life has largely comprised Sound Of Music related projects, including playing Captain Von Trapp in a local production when he was 50. 'I've had a wonderful life with The Sound Of Music' he says. 'It's been a constant part of my life and an endless blessing. We knew at the time of making it that we had something wonderful, but we didn't know it was going to have longevity. It plays three times a year in the United States. They love it everywhere, including China. 'I've heard thousands of stories of how the film has had an affect on people's lives. Like no other, the following is incredible. I get lots of messages a year from fans all over the World, and a large per centage is from Britain. 'How many people have that to take with them through their life? If you're going to only do one film, you couldn't do better than The Sound Of Music. Somebody recently posted online a picture of Rolfe and Liesl and it got 2 million hits - that shows the following this movie still has.' You can't help but wonder if Daniel feels he should have done a lot better than feature prominently in only one film, no matter how great it was. 'I don't think so. At my age, there are more important things than how much you did in terms of film and television. This is the life that I chose and I'm content with how things worked out.' Having said that though, Daniel later adds: 'When I look back on my career, on the one hand I'm very satisfied and on the other I'm not satisfied at all. I'm very satisfied with being the juvenile lead in the greatest film of all time. 'But on the other hand, I probably should have spent more time socialising with the rest of the cast, especially the main players. That would probably have made things better for me in terms of future jobs. 'And maybe joining the Marines wasn't the best career move at that time. But I wasn't trying to be a big Hollywood star. I didn't pursue it, and I didn't stay in LA. Maybe I should have stayed in LA and tried harder to break more into the business. 'But I'm now going on 82 and I can still sing and perform. I'd even put on tap shoes if I had to. I'm a very blessed man in my golden age to be in the position that I'm in with what's happening. 'I really appreciate that this documentary has come along for me at this time. And I got to be in the most wonderful film a person could ever hope to be in, I've never grown tired of it, I'm proud of the part I played, and I'm a part of it forever.'

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