Hulu's latest docuseries Faces of Music has finally arrived on the OTT and here's everything we know so far

Faces of Music ( Image via Instagram / @chappellroan )
Faces of Music ( Image via Instagram / @chappellroan )

What happens when beauty meets music in the background? Faces of Music is a new three-episode documentary series on Hulu, directed by Ting Poo, exploring just that meeting point! This collaboration with Sephora U.S., Digitas Pictures, Imagine Documentaries, and Hulu explores how stage faces are not just makeup—they are stories of identity, self-assurance, and cultural expression.

Featuring Chappell Roan, Victoria Monét, and Becky G, the series peels back the glamour of iconic beauty trends and exposes the emotional and creative motivators behind the looks. From dynamic stage makeup to morning skincare routines, each artist comes out from behind the scenes to reveal how beauty rituals become part of their art world.


What is Faces of Music about?

Faces of Music is a three-episode Hulu original docuseries that connects beauty routine to musical identity. One musician creating a beautiful look significant to them is featured in each 25–30 minute episode. By way of transformations, candid interviews explore how their choices are informed by broader cultural drives and self-expression.

There is no glitzy narration—just an individual "get-ready-with-me" style. Fans watch these artists perform live, witnessing the strength of beauty being used as a means of production and as part of a musical identity.


Who are the featured artists in Faces of Music?

Chappell Roan – A pop artist known for her dramatic glam, Chappell Roan returns to re-creating her complete pop-princess image, referencing its importance in her initial album and professional trajectory. On her episode, she re-creates the makeup style of her debut album cover, celebrating where she originated from and her queer roots. She is open about how makeup gives her confidence on stage.

Victoria Monét – A Grammy‑award-winning R&B singer whose style combines vintage glamour and personal heritage. Monét credits her mother's evening skincare routines and Hollywood idols, like Halle Berry, as having influenced her own style. She discusses how those beauty routines taught to her by her mom and drawn from Hollywood icons reinforce her showman personality.

Becky G – A Latin music singer who views makeup as cultural storytelling. She discusses how her beauty traditions allow her to engage with and honor her heritage on stage, explaining beauty as a form of cultural representation and personal empowerment.


Who made the series?

It was directed under the supervision of Ting Poo (author of Val for Amazon) and produced by Digitas Pictures and Imagine Documentaries on behalf of Sephora U.S.

Sephora's U.S. partnerships marketing team led this initiative to study how beauty converges with culture and music, an extension of their Sephora Sounds initiative to cultivate new musical acts.

Ting Poo's style is partial to in-your-face settings—like the makeup chair—to use as a springboard for more in-depth artist probing.


Why was Faces of Music created?

Sephora Chief Marketing Officer Zena Arnold describes Faces of Music as going "far beyond just products". Arnold explains that it attempts to show how beauty and music together produce identity and expression.

The goal is to allow artists to share genuine stories of empowerment, identity, and creative ritual without commercial influence. It's part of Sephora's larger effort toward diversity, inclusion, and cultural storytelling across industries.


Episode structure & style of Faces of Music

Length: About 25–30 minutes per episode.

Format: A combination of beauty routine video, backstage moments, and introspective interviews.

Tone: Unscripted and intimate, with artists speaking in their own words. No host or narrator is included.

Focus: How beauty routines affect stage presence, self-expression, and artistic flow.


Where and when to watch

The series was released on Hulu on January 22, 2025, and all three episodes are currently streaming.

No international launches or expansions have been announced yet.


Key themes revealed

Identity & Self-Expression: Artists speak to how beauty rituals connect to their cultural identity and personal history.

Empowerment Through Ritual: Pre-show prep procedures as confidence-builders through ritual.

Cultural Storytelling: From glam that's drag-inspired to old-school Hollywood glamour, beauty is storytelling.

Community & Belonging: Makeup as a connector between the artist, their followers, and broader cultural narratives.

Faces of Music is not in the business of selling stuff or sensationalized narratives—it modestly places artists, rituals, and artistic identity front and center. The series offers a direct, authentic perspective on how the pursuit of beauty mirrors musical expression and cultural belonging.

The lack of showy production or marketing bravado allows the focus to remain fixated on individual stories—real, spontaneous, and rooted in experience. For anyone curious about getting a peek behind the curtain of creative work in the world of music—or how makeup can influence not just a look, but stillness, persona, and sound—this series offers that glimpse.

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Edited by Ayesha Mendonca