The Columbus Dispatch

‘Real Housewives’ dish on ‘Ultimate Girls Trip’ drama

- Anika Reed

Calling all Housewives!

After years of Bravo fans begging the network for an all-star season of the durable “Real Housewives” franchise, the much-anticipate­d “Real Housewives: Ultimate Girls Trip” is finally here, though not on Bravo: The first three episodes are now streaming on Peacock – only the first is free – with a new one due weekly on Thursdays.

The reality series gathers veteran housewives from different cities for a weeklong getaway in the Turks and Caicos. The cast features Kenya Moore and Cynthia Bailey from “Real Housewives of Atlanta”; sisters-in-law Teresa Giudice and Melissa Gorga of “Real Housewives of New Jersey”; “Real Housewives of New York” OGS Luann de Lesseps and Ramona Singer; and Kyle Richards, the sole representa­tive of “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.”

“When you pull (the women) out of their franchises, it’s just a completely different dynamic automatica­lly,” says Kyle, an original Beverly Hills cast member now in her 11th season. “There is drama there, of course there is, and it started a lot sooner than I expected.”

The joint trip doesn’t skimp on tension. The first episode (aptly titled, “When Wives Collide”) commences with a face-off between Ramona and Kenya; discomfort between sisters-in-law Teresa and Melissa; and hurt feelings after Ramona calls Teresa a “scarecrow” without much of a brain, with promises of more clashes to come.

Melissa says the Ramona-kenya argument “just seems so strange. I can’t even see the two of them even saying hello to each other. To watch them argue was definitely shocking.”

A clash between Kyle and Cynthia will likely surprise fans – it surprised the women, too.

“Cynthia (and) I had a little bit of an issue,” Kyle says. “I wasn’t expecting that.”

Cynthia says Kyle, “in the best possible way,” was the least of her concerns going into the show because she’s “just pretty easygoing. We bumped heads early on in the trip. Once we did, I have to give her credit because she apologized pretty much right away. … I wish looking back that I was just able to just kind of accept her apology sooner than I did,” Cynthia says.

Kyle jokes she “didn’t know if it was a setup or a compliment that they thought I could handle my own” as the sole cast member from her city.

Cynthia had another unanticipa­ted issue with Kenya that she says “changed the dynamic of our friendship.”

“That hurt me, because Kenya is someone who I am friends with and who I’m always going to have love for,” says Cynthia. “That is something that I didn’t expect, that I didn’t want and that I’m still dealing with.”

Melissa also acknowledg­es the tension with Teresa going into the trip, especially “the struggle of me getting on this show with my sister-in-law. I feel like she’s never fully accepted the fact that I’m on the show, too. And it’s always a challengin­g subject for us.”

Luann says she “had some conflicts, but all in all I feel like I walked away unscathed.”

The new show, which wrapped filming in May, comes amid intense storylines and major exits on the franchise’s other editions.

The recent “Beverly Hills” season centered on Erika Jayne (real name: Erika Girardi) and the ongoing legal questions about her ex, lawyer Tom Girardi, who is accused of stealing millions from his clients.

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