Whitney Leavitt Confirms Exit from ‘The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ as Hulu Series Navigates Turbulent Year
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Whitney Leavitt has confirmed that she is exiting Hulu’s reality series The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, marking a significant cast change for the influencer-focused show built around the lives of Utah content creators. The announcement arrives as Leavitt’s profile continues to rise beyond social media and reality television, with recent success on Broadway and an upcoming lead role and executive producer credit in a holiday romantic comedy.
Exit announced on Broadway stage
Leavitt shared news of her departure during her final performance as Roxie Hart in the Broadway revival of Chicago on Sunday, May 3, telling the audience that she “is departing” The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. The Hollywood Reporter first detailed the announcement that same day, with Deadline later confirming the exit through a representative for Leavitt.
According to coverage summarizing those reports, Leavitt’s onstage comments formally marked the end of her time on the Hulu series even as she closed an extended Broadway run that followed strong ticket sales. Us Weekly reported that the magazine reached out to a representative for further comment on her decision but did not immediately note any additional statement about the reasons behind her departure.
On the eve of her final performance, Leavitt shared an emotional Instagram video reflecting on the end of her time as Roxie Hart, writing that she was feeling a “roller coaster of emotions” and encouraging followers not to let anyone convince them that their dreams are impossible, though she did not reference Mormon Wives in that post. PopCulture.com similarly noted that her public remarks around closing night centered on gratitude for the stage opportunity rather than on the reality show itself.
From MomTok and Hulu to Broadway and film
Leavitt joined The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives as a full-time cast member when the series debuted on Hulu in September 2024, with the show highlighting a group of Utah-based Mormon mother influencers whose lives and marriages were thrust into public view amid a high-profile cheating and “MomTok” scandal. The series, which includes storylines about relationships, faith, parenting, and social media fame, has offered viewers a look at how these women navigate both community expectations and online scrutiny.
Since joining the cast, Leavitt’s career has expanded beyond reality TV; she competed on Season 34 of Dancing With the Stars, where she finished in sixth place alongside professional partner Mark Ballas. PopCulture.com reported that the dancing competition helped bridge her transition from Hulu personality to stage performer, with Ballas later joining her for portions of her Chicago run.
Leavitt made her Broadway debut as Roxie Hart in February 2026, following December 2025 reports that she would move from the reality series into the long-running musical, and her engagement in the role was eventually extended due to record-breaking ticket sales. During this period, she maintained a presence within the Mormon Wives ensemble while increasingly focusing on live performance work.
Her next major project is a holiday romantic comedy titled All for Love , produced by The Ninth House, in which Leavitt will both star and serve as an executive producer. PopCulture.com reports that the film co‑stars Cobra Kai actor Jesse Kove and follows podcast producer Winona, played by Leavitt, who teams up on a holiday dating app and a renovation project with rugged contractor Luke, played by Kove, as they work together on her grandmother’s Christmas Eve venue.
A show under scrutiny and on pause
Leavitt’s departure comes as The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives continues to face intense public scrutiny stemming from domestic violence allegations involving fellow cast member Taylor Frankie Paul and her ex-partner Dakota Mortensen. Us Weekly reports that a police investigation into an alleged domestic violence incident between Paul and Mortensen resulted in a production halt for the series, and the outlet later confirmed that prosecutors ultimately declined to file charges against Paul.
PopCulture.com notes that in April the show was cleared to resume filming for Season 5 following an unexpected hiatus linked to those investigations, including internal review by Hulu and inquiries by Utah authorities. The site also describes a video released from the 2023 incident that showed Paul throwing barstools at Mortensen while her young daughter was present, footage that attracted substantial public attention and led ABC to pull Paul’s planned season of The Bachelorette just days before it was scheduled to air.
In commentary quoted from a March Interview magazine conversation, Leavitt responded to questions about the situation by emphasizing safety for all involved, saying she had “a lot of emotions” and was “still processing everything,” but that “the safety of human beings, especially children, comes first” and that she did not want violence to be “tolerated” or “overlooked.” Her remarks underscored a broader concern within the fandom and among viewers about how reality productions handle domestic violence, family safety, and the responsibilities of creators and networks when sensitive incidents arise.
Uncertain ensemble future and fan questions
The show’s executive producer Jeff Jenkins addressed speculation about whether Taylor Frankie Paul would return for Season 5, telling fans during Deadline’s “Reality TV Summit” on May 1 that his “hope” is to see her film again with the other women, but only if she is “healthy of body and mind” before any discussion of returning to set. His comments suggested that production decisions will weigh both cast well‑being and the show’s ongoing narrative arcs as filming moves forward.
Questions about the series’ future have also come from within the cast’s extended circle; Chase McWhorter, the ex‑husband of cast member Miranda McWhorter, said on the April 7 episode of Harry Jowsey’s Boyfriend Material podcast that he believed camera crews might not return at all, describing the situation as “up in the air” while expressing hope that other women’s stories would still be told. His comments reflected uncertainty among some insiders even as reports in April and May pointed to a restart of filming and continued interest from viewers in the ensemble’s evolving lives.
Within the fandom, Leavitt’s departure is poised to reshape the dynamic of a series that has been closely associated with the “MomTok” influencer ecosystem and with debates over how religion, marriage, social media, and personal identity intersect in public life. PopCulture.com frames her exit as a loss for the original cast even as it positions her for wider mainstream projects, reflecting the increasingly porous boundaries between TikTok fame, network reality shows, and traditional entertainment platforms.
Representation, reality TV, and where Leavitt goes next
The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives has documented the experiences of a group of Mormon mothers in Utah navigating faith, family expectations, and online celebrity, with storylines that have at times intersected with conversations about gender roles, consent, and the pressures placed on women in conservative communities. Although not framed as an explicitly LGBTQ+ series, the show’s portrayal of relationship norms and public moral scrutiny has resonated with some queer and gender‑diverse viewers accustomed to seeing religious communities depicted as monolithic, as discussions around the show have highlighted a range of perspectives among people of faith.
Leavitt’s move into scripted work and behind-the-camera roles reflects a broader trend of reality personalities increasingly using their platforms to pursue producing credits and more creative control over their careers. As the lead and an executive producer on All for Love, she is set to influence both the story and how characters are portrayed, extending the reach she initially built in the MomTok community and on Hulu into more traditional film and television lanes.
Neither Us Weekly nor PopCulture.com reported any statement from Hulu about how Leavitt’s departure will be addressed in upcoming episodes or marketing, and there has been no detailed public casting update for Season 5 beyond confirmation that production plans to move ahead. For now, viewers and followers of the MomTok ecosystem are left to watch two parallel narratives: a reality show working to regain stability after controversy, and a former cast member stepping more firmly into Broadway and film.
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