Garcelle Beauvais said she felt good about walking out the door of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills and has not seriously considered a return since announcing her exit on Instagram. Speaking on SiriusXM’s Let’s Talk Off Camera with Kelly Ripa, Beauvais said the show stopped feeling enjoyable for her and no longer felt fun.
“When I looked around, when I looked at the couches, the chairs where we were sitting, I didn’t have a friend. I didn’t have an ally,” Beauvais said, describing why she left the franchise. Kelly Ripa noted that Andy Cohen has said the door remains open, but Beauvais said she is not thinking seriously about going back just yet.
Beauvais also said her relationship with Sutton Stracke has cooled since the exit announcement. The two barely spoke after Beauvais posted her departure on Instagram, and their most recent exchange came when they unexpectedly crossed paths on a red carpet at an event premiere. Beauvais said they used to be “tied to the hip” when they were together at events, a change that underscores how quickly the dynamic shifted once she left the cast.
Her exit lands with added weight because Beauvais was the first Black woman to join the Beverly Hills franchise. She said the pressure was not about changing who she is. It was about being the first Black woman on a well-known franchise and knowing people were watching to see how she would show up. “I’m not just a Black woman. I’m a Haitian woman. I’m also an immigrant woman. I’m also a single woman,” she said.
That perspective also shaped what she said came next for women of color in Hollywood. Beauvais said increased representation has helped create more room for diverse storytelling and leadership, and she pointed to her own career as evidence of how much has changed. She said she now has a production company and is working more than ever in her 50s, a contrast with the early days of her career when people doubted whether she could even walk and talk at the same time on camera.
For Beauvais, the move away from reality television reads less like a pause than a clean break from a job that no longer fit. The unanswered question is not whether the door is open. It is whether she ever sees a reason to walk back through it.