Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery

Actress storyteller shares reflections from a sunlit cemetery on Florence’s historic ridge

By Pratibha

A Standing Invitation Above The City

Leah Lewis, the American actress celebrated for her breakout role in Netflix’s The Half of It, took to Instagram on June 11, 2025, to share a personal exploration of Florence. In a carousel post (https://www.instagram.com/p/DKy3QnUoGNT/), she described the 90-degree heat as she climbed the winding lanes toward San Miniato. Anticipating Gregorian chants at 6 PM, Lewis found the hour still early at 3 PM but let her blistered feet press on, driven by curiosity.

Scenes From Wanderings In Florence

Lewis’s caption reads like a modern-day travelogue. Along the cobbled ascent, she witnessed a Chinese visitor assisting an elderly local with a child on a bicycle and eavesdropped on Italian men well into their 70s trading U.S. headlines as though sharing folklore. Lovers paused on narrow sidewalks for stolen kisses under the Tuscan sun, and Lewis herself often slipped into alleyway alcoves, absorbing life’s rhythms from benches and shadowed corners.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

At the cemetery, the bustle of the city gave way to stillness. Surrounded by moss-covered tombstones, Lewis wrote, “I felt as if I was being watched”—a sensation of shared existence between the living and the dead. Each grave she passed seemed to offer a final reward: a sweeping view of Florence’s terracotta roofs and the distant Arno. The hilltop site, she noted, must be the ultimate gallery for the departed.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

Connecting With Florence’s Pulse

At every turn, Lewis paused to frame terracotta rooftops, olive groves, and the distant spires with her camera. One shot captures sunbeams illuminating a stone angel’s wings—“cinematic and humbling,” she commented. Followers quickly chimed in with local tips: Bardini Gardens for panoramic sunsets, hidden chapels just off the tourist trails, and evening chants reverberating through ancient cloisters. Lewis promised to return with fresh discoveries, sparking a real-time dialogue about Florence’s best-kept secrets.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

Her post underscores a larger pattern on Lewis’s feed—merging artistry and adventure. Earlier snapshots feature candid mountain-goat selfies and reflections on weightlifting that trace the arc from physical discipline to creative drive. The San Miniato series feels like an extension of that personal narrative, one shaped equally by inner reflection and outward exploration.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

Background And Upcoming Projects

Off-screen, Lewis balances her travel habits with an active acting career. Following her acclaimed portrayal of Ellie Chu, she joined the Charmed reboot and most recently appeared on CBS’s Matlock, celebrating press screenings in early 2025. In another Instagram announcement (https://www.instagram.com/p/DJXJlUWJnP3/), Lewis revealed that production wrapped on Dog Years, a contemporary romance directed by Mary Bronaugh. Starring alongside Xolo Maridueña, Xóchitl Gómez, and Brian David Gilbert, the film explores early adulthood, identity, and love over time. Scheduled for a 2026 festival run, Dog Years highlights Lewis’s growing range and commitment to heartfelt storytelling.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

Her Wikipedia entry notes training at Orange County School of the Arts, blending dance, theater, and photography. That mix of formal study and offbeat curiosity informs posts like her Florence diary, where historic vistas intersect with personal insight—offering fans both destination ideas and an intimate look at her creative process.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

On Instagram, Lewis’s audience now numbers in the hundreds of thousands. Comments on her San Miniato images range from travel envy to gratitude for sharing hidden corners, reinforcing her role as both celebrity and cultural curator. When she joked about trading her grave for one with trees instead of stone, followers responded with tongue-in-cheek funeral itinerary rescues and calls for a live podcast from the hilltop.

Leah Lewis Explores San Miniato Hilltop Cemetery pinit button
Image: Instagram

Reflecting on her journey, Lewis reminded readers that travel and art are intertwined acts of exploration. “Each corner of Florence holds a story,” she wrote, “and sometimes it’s the quietest spots that speak the loudest.” Her San Miniato post proved that the hilltop cemetery is more than a tourist viewpoint—it’s a living museum, an open-air theater where past and present converge.

Whether on screen in a new movie, on set for a television reboot, or wandering ancient Tuscan lanes, Leah Lewis continues to share moments that feel both universal and deeply personal. Through sunlit graves and mountain goats, her storytelling invites us all to look closer, linger longer, and discover the extraordinary in everyday life.

disqus_comment
Pratibha holds a master's degree in English from Madras University. A bookworm from a young age, she devours books and digital humanities to nourish her writing projects. Pratibha began her writing career in 2018 and has experience writing formal, informal, and technical content.

Read full bio of Pratibha
Latest Articles