Penticton Herald

Elisabeth Moss returns to TV in Hulu’s ‘Handmaid’s Tale’

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NEW YORK (AP) — “The timing has been uncanny,” says Margaret Atwood, marveling at how her 1985 novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, has not only been given renewed life as a TV series but has also gained disturbing urgency.

“Last November 7, they thought they were making a fantasy fiction series,” Atwood says. “On November 9, they thought maybe they were making a documentar­y.”

However you take it, The Handmaid’s Tale premieres Wednesday on Hulu with three gripping episodes. The remaining seven will be released each Wednesday thereafter.

The cast includes Joseph Fiennes, Alexis Bledel and Samira Wiley, and stars Elisabeth Moss as Offred, who, as one of the few remaining fertile women in the cruel dystopia of Gilead, is among the caste of women forced into sexual servitude in a desperate attempt to repopulate a ravaged world.

Such is life in this totalitari­an society, where human rights are trampled and women in particular are treated as property of the state.

Needless to say, Offred is a career stretch for Moss, who remains best known as protofemin­ist copywriter Peggy Olson on the advertisin­g drama Mad Men, and who initially caught the audience’s eye as First Daughter Zoey Bartlet on The West Wing.

Now 34, Moss further expanded her horizons during the Handmaid’s Tale shoot in Toronto: She took on the additional role of producer.

“I had no interest in it just being a title card,” she says, “and I was extremely lucky. They listened to me and asked my advice on things in a way that I didn’t expect.

“It’s been an amazing opportunit­y for me to learn. And now I’m totally obsessed with it! I’ve got two different projects that I’m considerin­g buying. I’ve got lists on my phone for actors I might like to cast!”

The tone of The Handmaid’s Tale is subdued, reflecting the oppressive conditions the women live under. And it posed an acting challenge for Moss, one that Atwood, 77, as the novelist who created her character, calls “pretty difficult.”

Moss’ problem, says Atwood, “is to show someone who is unable to speak out, because it’s too dangerous, but who has to convey to the audience those emotions she is suppressin­g. We must be able to be inside her mind, while also being in the larger situation.”

“I want Offred to be the wife, mother or friend that you can see yourself in,” Moss says. “I want you to think, ‘That’s how I would react. That’s how I would feel.”’

 ?? Hulu ?? This image shows Elisabeth Moss as Offred in a scene from The Handmaid’s Tale.
Hulu This image shows Elisabeth Moss as Offred in a scene from The Handmaid’s Tale.

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