Tudum released a video highlighting fifty easter eggs scattered across the second season of Wednesday. The compilation highlights the many layers of detail carefully woven into the show’s design. Some of them are small curiosities, others connect Wednesday to major references in cinema history and to the long legacy of the Addams Family.
The presence of so many hidden details is not accidental. The production team built an environment where costumes, sets, and even monster movements reflect earlier eras of film and television. This makes the series feel more than just a continuation of a story; it works like an archive of influences. Among dozens of examples, five stand out as the most striking from a cultural perspective.

Hitchcock references in Principal Weems’ wardrobe
Principal Weems’ costumes were designed as direct nods to Alfred Hitchcock’s films. In season one, the inspiration came from Tippi Hedren in The Birds (1963), while season two drew on Kim Novak’s look in Vertigo (1958). The hairstyle, makeup, and overall silhouette closely echoed these icons, aligning the character with the atmosphere of suspense that defines Wednesday while also situating the show within a broader cinematic tradition.

Slurp and The Man Who Laughs (1928)
The zombie known as Slurp was shaped with unusual references. Actor Owen Painter told Tudum that he drew on two extremes: the slapstick of the Three Stooges and the unsettling performance of Conrad Veidt in the silent classic The Man Who Laughs from 1928. That film left a long cultural imprint and even influenced the design of the Joker in comic books. By channeling it for Slurp’s appearance and posture, the show inserted a visual echo that stretches back almost a century.
The body swap episode with Wednesday and Enid
In season two, there was an episode where Wednesday and Enid ended up switching bodies. On screen, it came across as comic relief, a sudden turn where each had to live inside the other’s skin for a while. Tudum later showed how Jenna Ortega and Emma Myers rehearsed the switch, testing the gestures and figuring out how to carry each other’s rhythm. What made it stand out even more was the coincidence that Emma Myers had starred in Family Switch in 2023, another story about trading places. Viewers picked up on that overlap and read it almost like a wink, a playful self-reference. The production never called it an easter egg, but the connection was too striking to ignore.

Morticia’s cottage and the 1960s Addams Family
Morticia’s cottage was one of the most complex sets in the new season. It took nine months to build and included fireplaces sculpted with trees, slugs and snails, together with stained glass windows decorated with roses. The space also carried a stronger cultural weight by bringing back items from the 1960s Addams Family series. A stuffed bear, a taxidermied tortoise, and even an iron maiden appeared inside the cottage. These pieces connected the current show with earlier screen versions of the family, bridging decades of history through the set decoration.
The Hyde and aluminum stilts
The Hyde was presented as one of the main monsters of season two. The effect was not entirely digital. To achieve the disturbing, irregular motion of the creature, stunt performers used crutches and aluminum stilts. Tudum revealed this practical method, which gave the monster a tangible presence that pure computer graphics could never achieve. It also echoed the approach of classic monster films that relied on prosthetics and physical tricks to create fear.

Other details worth noting
The video from Tudum also shared smaller but still surprising elements. Uncle Fester was shown to have 33 driver’s licenses and 18 passports, each with a different photograph of Fred Armisen, who shaved his head for the role. Grandmama’s signature Bloody Mary only reached its final version after the crew tested 36 different glasses before choosing the right one. These are the kinds of touches that fill the season with hidden humor and precision, rewarding those who look closely at what is on screen.
Conclusion
Wednesday season two does not rely on these easter eggs to tell its story, but they add depth and make the show more rewarding on a second viewing. According to Tudum, fifty hidden details can be spotted across the episodes, and the five presented here stand out because they connect the series to larger traditions. Principal Weems’ Hitchcock wardrobe ties it to film history, Slurp recalls the visual style of expressionism, the body swap episode links to Emma Myers’ recent career, Morticia’s cottage honors the 1960s series, and the Hyde brings back physical techniques from monster cinema. Added to smaller curiosities like Fester’s documents or Grandmama’s glass collection, they explain why Wednesday continues to attract close attention: every scene holds the possibility of something left unseen the first time.