Reese Witherspoon announced on Sunday that Lexi Minetree will play Elle Woods in a new project, using a short Instagram caption to introduce a new face for one of the more enduring characters in modern comedy history.
Witherspoon kept the message tight: “The best part about Elle Woods has always been the girls who see themselves in her. 💕 (And I think you’ll love the new Elle ✨ @leximinetree)”
No title, release date, or studio confirmation came with it. Witherspoon offered a tag and a clear statement of intent, then left it there.
That framing is deliberate. She didn’t sell this on nostalgia or on her own long history with the character. She sold it on the audience. These are the women and girls who’ve spent two decades treating Elle as evidence that being smart and feminine aren’t a contradiction. That’s a meaningful signal about what the new version is supposed to carry forward.
Legally Blonde opened in theaters in 2001, with Witherspoon originating the role of Harvard Law student Elle Woods. It became a genuine cultural touchstone. A 2003 sequel followed, along with a Broadway musical adaptation that kept the character in front of new audiences. A third film has been in various stages of development for years. Witherspoon has been attached as a producer through her Hello Sunshine company. Hello Sunshine has since developed major projects including Big Little Lies and The Morning Show. No confirmed format or storyline details have come out publicly in connection with this new announcement.
Lexi Minetree, directly tagged and endorsed by Witherspoon, had not publicly commented on the news as of Sunday.
Elle Woods has meant something specific to a lot of people for a long time. She’s shorthand for a particular kind of defiance – the argument that ambition and a pink wardrobe aren’t in conflict. Any new version of her will be held to that standard. That’s just the nature of the character.
Witherspoon seems to understand that. Leading with the audience’s emotional connection to Elle rather than with plot details is a thoughtful approach. It positions the project not as a nostalgia play but as something that wants to earn the same response the original did. It’s also a quiet echo of the film’s core argument: don’t underestimate the girl in the pink blazer.
Whether this is a sequel, a reboot, or something else entirely hasn’t been confirmed. Hello Sunshine has not issued a formal announcement, and no studio has publicly confirmed distribution. That information will almost certainly follow in the coming weeks. For now, the post does what it needed to: put Lexi Minetree’s name in front of Legally Blonde’s audience and frame the handoff as continuation, not replacement.
That’s a considered opening move. Elle Woods, as we know, tends to get the last word.
