The legion of fans who adore Emily in Paris have plenty to dig into when it comes to the frothy drama of marketing exec Emily Cooperâs career and romances in the City of Light, but itâs the love affair viewers have with the French capital itself that keeps the Netflix showâs massive audience coming back for more. Much like series creator Darren Starâs culture-shifting Sex and the City, in Emily in Paris the setting earns its nod in the title and is as much a character of the show as Lily Collinsâs plucky fish-out-of-water Cooper. Weâre all just tourists here to do a little Parisian sightseeing via streamingâand the programâs production team, who know this well, make certain that viewers are in for a visual feast sans trans-Atlantic flight. âTo me, the show is about transporting the audience somewhere, and I think this season, we do this in a bigger way than we ever have before,â Star teases of the fourth Emily in Paris season, part one of which premieres today on Netflix.
Collins spends the bulk of her own working hours shooting scenes in her characterâs workplace, Agence Grateau (née Savoir), which is just fine by the leading lady of this Emmy-nominated series. She and the cast jest that the dreamy design of the office set would be enough to entice them into overnight stays. âWe joked that we would put mattresses in here and actually sleep here,â Collins tells AD in a behind-the-scenes tour, citing the âcrown molding, the colors; itâs so calm, the floorâ¦everything about it felt as though theyâd just taken a Parisian apartment and put it into an office workspace.â
Architect Georges-Eugène Haussmannâs influence on the look of Parisâs buildings cannot be overstated, so Star opted for a Haussmannian-style space for Cooperâs office in order to invoke that classic Parisian feel. Production designer Anne Seibel explains that while Agence Grateauâs interior is all a stage set, the fictional firm uses exterior shots of the very real Place de Valois in Paris. The likeness doesnât stop at the doorstep; the buildingâs architecture was used to inform the design of the office set. âMy aim was to mix and match the exterior [of the real Place de Valois] with the interior [set],â Seibel explains. âSo we surveyed all the windows and we adjusted the whole set inside according to the space.â
Art imitates life more closely than one might expect in other elements of the space. Agence Grateauâs kitchenette, Collins says, is âfully functioning,â and the officeâs conference room, a sun-bathed baby blue space anchored by a large wood round table âis sometimes the bane of our existence,â she admitsâa sentiment that likely strikes a chord with many real corporate warriors out there. The actor explains that the team is âusually in there for a couple of hoursâ due to the larger number of cast members gathered for meeting scenes and the number of shots necessary.