The BEST episodes of Mrs Playmen
Every episode of Mrs Playmen ever, ranked from best to worst by thousands of votes from fans of the show. The best episodes of Mrs Playmen!
Adelina Tattilo is Mrs. Playmen, editor of Italy’s first erotic magazine and a revolutionary force in the conservative, moralistic Rome of the 1970s. A pioneering entrepreneur in an era when women were confined to the roles of mothers and housewives; a devout Catholic, yet also a bold nonconformist, she stood at the forefront of battles for divorce, abortion rights, and women’s emancipation. When her husband, Saro Balsamo, abandons her, leaving her alone to face creditors as the sole owner of an empire on the brink of collapse, Adelina refuses to give up. She reinvents Playmen, transforming it into a sophisticated and cutting-edge publication and, defying the entrenched sexism of the time, gathers around her a team of brilliant intellectuals, daring creatives, and visionary photographers. Together, they break taboos, provoke the establishment, and ignite a cultural revolution, issue after issue, scandal after scandal.

#2 - Episode 7
Season 1 - Episode 7 - Aired 11/12/2025
The future of Playmen hangs in the balance. As Elsa desperately looks for a new angle to use in the trial, Adelina gets distracted by a family emergency.

#3 - Episode 2
Season 1 - Episode 2 - Aired 11/12/2025
Thrust into her new role, Adelina faces money troubles at home and at work, and must decide whether to exploit a tragedy to keep the magazine afloat.


#5 - Episode 6
Season 1 - Episode 6 - Aired 11/12/2025
Divorce papers in hand, Adelina travels to Nice to ask Saro for help. Over dinner, she encounters a famous face featured in her own magazine.

#6 - Episode 3
Season 1 - Episode 3 - Aired 11/12/2025
As the magazine battles stiff competition, Adelina targets a demure TV host to be its new cover star. Chartroux takes a meeting behind the editor's back.

#7 - Episode 1
Season 1 - Episode 1 - Aired 11/12/2025
Adelina Tattilo is betrayed by her husband, leaving her in charge of his erotic magazine — and responsible for its sudden entanglement with the law.
