FINALLY, finally, it is here — the fourth
series of Selling Sunset. For more than a year
we have been starved of the life-giving sight
of extremely tall, rake-thin women strutting
into extremely large, luscious houses in Los
Angeles in shreds of Balenciaga, asking
each other: “What do you call the kitchen
off the main kitchen?”
Fans will know the answer: it is, of course,
“chef ’s kitchen”. After hoovering up three
whole series of the reality show, mostly
back to back, over the long, horrible
summer of lockdown — it went to the top
of the charts on Netflix, where it became
the wildfire hit of Covid — there aren’t
many of us who aren’t experts in selling
“praper-dee” (property) in Hollywood now.
Each episode of the show, which features
estate agents who work on Sunset Strip,
is a volley of high heels, short skirts,
ridiculous hair and fake everything — from
tits to fireplaces. Most of the best parts
are brought to us by its extraordinary
villain, Christine Quinn. She is outra-
geously watchable — a kind of sexy, thin,
diamond-encrusted emu Marilyn Manson:
nearly 6ft of Texan boss bitch, complete
with signature rope of long, dead-white
ponytail. Usually she’s wearing some acidic
outfit — a fluorescent tracksuit or boots
that have “Rich AF” down the side or a
tiny chair as a handbag. She will happily
pick her way through the desks at the
Oppenheim Group, the estate agency
where the women work, looking, as one
co-star put it, like “the Joker”.
And then there’s the bitching. Hardly
a scene goes by without the hilarious Quinn,
33, telling us how much she loathes her
colleagues — particularly Chrishell, a honey-
locked, button-nosed, terminally conniving
former soap actress who is a “kiss-ass”.
Quinn prickles with savage one-liners —
“You look like a slutty Big Bird.” About
Chrishell, then a new agent: “She can sit on
the floor until she’s proved herself.” At
the end of the new series the fight gets so
nasty that Quinn spends the best part of
20 minutes of the finale in tears at a party,
screaming “You guys are horrible” and “You
guys are monsters.” It is like nothing I have
ever seen on a reality TV show.
So I’m kind of apprehensive about
meeting her — will she be a total wreck?
We meet in a sexy hotel in Soho, where she
is staying with her husband, Christian, a
tech entrepreneur — “He invented the
food-delivery industry” — and her baby,
also called Christian, whom she had in
May. In person she looks amazing: head to
toe in ice-cream lavender bouclé and drip-
ping with diamonds, including a rope of
diamonds given to her by her husband —
when we are horsing around at the shoot
later she insists I wear it. She doesn’t work
out and eats anything she wants. “She’s like
my straight male clients,” her press officer
says with a sigh. She is incredibly funny,
relaxed, smart — but it is no secret that
I love her.
How is she doing? Well, she still has
“trauma” from the birth, she says. She had
to film all through her pregnancy, 12 hours
a day, going back home between scenes and
getting new clothes and glam for each. At
35 weeks she had been “cramping so bad for
two days ... and I called my doctor and told
Above Jumper, £485, Dolce & Gabbana;
matchesfashion.com. Vintage Maurice
Daquin suit, earrings and necklace, Rellik.
Shoes, £940, Versace. Tights, £8, UK Tights.
Opposite Vintage Marc Jacobs blazer,
Found and Vision. Miniskirt, £238, Gauge81;
matchesfashion.com. Boots, £750, the
Attico. Satin gloves, £145, Cornelia James.
Vintage belt, Rellik. Tights, £18, Falke.
Vintage Givenchy earrings, £195, Susan
Caplan. Hat, stylist’s own
10 • The Sunday Times Style