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Entertainment
Terrell Smith

The Young and the Restless spoilers: Diane’s renovations are a hit, but accidentally reveal a new mystery?

Susan Walters as Diane at a dining table in The Young and the Restless.

After weeks of teasing The Young and the Restless’ Jack (Peter Bergman) about her top-secret renovations to the Abbott Mansion, Diane (Susan Walters) finally started to reveal the finished product in The Young and the Restless episode that aired on April 24. Right away, Kyle (Michael Mealor) was impressed with his mother’s work, but Jack was left speechless.

As a new episode picked up on April 25, Diane panics, thinking Jack’s silence equates to disapproval. However, he finally musters the strength to tell his wife that he loves the new look of the Abbott family home. He appreciates that she maintained the integrity of the home he grew up in, while also breathing new life into it. He even predicts that Traci (Beth Maitland) and Ashley (Eileen Davidson) will also be huge fans of the renovations.

Walking from room to room, Jack continues to be amazed and appreciative. In the process of Diane taking him on this tour, she shows him an unfamiliar portrait hanging over the fireplace mantle. He’s perplexed by the choice in art, and she informs him that the painting came from the attic. It was a gift from Dina (Marla Adams) to John (Jerry Douglas) dated to 1956. Additionally, there was a note on the back of it. Jack finds it sweet that Diane saved the painting, and we find the painting itself mysterious.

Some may call us overly suspicious, but we can’t help but think the painting could soon lead to the reveal of yet another Abbott family secret, especially given that writers opted to highlight the year 1956. So what mystery? Well, this is where things could get very interesting.

Eileen Davidson, The Young and the Restless (Image credit: CBS)

Our first instinct is to assume that if there is something mysterious coming down the pipeline, it has to do with Ashley. Last year, Ashley had a breakdown of sorts thanks to her dissociative identity disorder, and although it was Martin (Christopher Cousins) who probably told her, he was right that her DID most likely stems from childhood trauma. The Young and the Restless hasn’t addressed what that trauma could have been to this day, so we could only hope that this painting could be the first step in finally unearthing what happened.

Unfortunately, because 1956 predates Ashley’s existence (Davidson herself was not born), there’s doubt that the painting is a direct connection to the brilliant chemist and businesswoman. So, unless Jack’s curiosity is piqued by what else Diane may have found in the attic, and he finds something directly tied to Ashley, we aren’t sure the painting will be a stepping stone to complete this open-ended storyline for her.

Peter Bergman, The Young and the Restless (Image credit: CBS)

With that being said, if there is meaning behind the painting, perhaps it’s tied to Jack in some way. If The Young and the Restless sticks true to Bergman’s real age, then Jack would have been a child around 1956. Is it possible that something happened with a young Dina and John around then that sparked Dina to give the painting to John? Dina had an affair behind John’s back that led to Ashley’s conception, so was there another affair afoot or something else?

Again, our suspicion here could all boil down to nothing. But in daytime, sometimes you have to put on your detective hat.

New episodes of The Young and the Restless air weekdays on CBS. Episodes become available to stream on Paramount Plus the next day.

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