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Widows Bay Cast: Matthew Rhys Leads Apple TV+ Horror-Comedy Wednesday

Widows Bay cast led by Matthew Rhys arrives Wednesday as Apple TV+ launches the first two episodes of the horror-comedy set in New England.

'Widow's Bay' Is the Best Stephen King Mixtape Ever
'Widow's Bay' Is the Best Stephen King Mixtape Ever

drops the first two episodes of on Wednesday, putting at the center of a New England island town that is equal parts civic boosterism and nightmare fuel. Rhys plays , the town’s new mayor, a man who wants to turn Widow’s Bay into a tourist destination even as the place’s old curse hangs over everything he touches.

The series, described as Parks & Recreation meets Stephen King, opens in a town with a historical center devoted to preserving the Widow’s Bay legacy. That legacy is not clean. The town’s history reaches back to an 1800s cannibalism-in-the-church incident, and the show leans hard into the collision between small-town public service and supernatural dread.

That collision is part of the hook. ’s show gives Loftis a deputy in Patricia, played by , while appears as a flinty veteran in his office and plays a perpetually bewildered clerk. Stephen Root turns up as an old salty dog around town, filling out a cast that makes the mayor’s campaign for respectability look increasingly impossible.

The horror side does not hold back. A haunted inn riffs on both The Shining and It, a legendary sea hag targets Loftis, a vintage book on how to throw a party has a secondary agenda, and a reanimated corpse shows up in the mix. Those pieces give the series its bite, but they also sharpen the show’s central tension: Loftis is trying to sell a place that seems determined to remember exactly what it is.

That is why Wednesday matters. The first two episodes give viewers the full premise at once — a civic-minded new mayor, a town with a preserved legacy and a rotten past, and a genre mash-up that appears to be as interested in workplace banter as it is in bloodline curses. If the series lands, it will be because it finds a straight face inside the absurdity and lets Widow’s Bay stay strange all the way through.

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