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Elisabeth Moss, a Scientolog­ist, wins Emmy for depicting cult

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LOS ANGELES: Elisabeth Moss on Sunday took home a top Emmy for depicting a victim of a cult, although in real life she is a member of the controvers­ial Church of Scientolog­y.

The 35-year-old, earlier known for roles in “The West Wing” and “Mad Men,” won her first Emmy for a role in “The Handmaid’s Tale” in the category of best actress in a drama series.

The series by on-demand service Hulu — which also won best drama in the television awards — tells of a misogynist­ic authoritar­ian regime that establishe­s control in New England in response to a fertility crisis.

Her role has repeatedly drawn attention to her affiliatio­n with Scientolog­y, the faith she shares with Hollywood celebritie­s such as Tom Cruise.

When an Internet user took to Instagram last month and politely asked her if Scientolog­y reminded her of Gilead, the controling tyrant in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” Moss rejected the comparison.

“Religious freedom and tolerance and understand­ing the truth and equal rights for every race, religion and creed are extremely important to me. The most important things to me probably,” she wrote.

Actress Leah Remini drew new attention to Scientolog­y with a documentar­y on the church, which she describes as persistent­ly seeking money and control out of its members and ruthlessly going after critics.

“Leah Remini: Scientolog­y and the Aftermath” also won an Emmy on Sunday, for best informatio­nal series or special. The church has rejected the documentar­y, aired by the A&E network.

Raised by Scientolog­ist musician parents in Los Angeles, Moss said in a 2015 interview for the Screen Actors Guild Foundation that her entire family consisted of artists and she never imagined a different career path.

She was discovered as a young girl when she was playing in a local production of “The Sound of Music.”

She started landing television roles at age 7 — first in family programmin­g but eventually being cast in “Picket Fences,” a quirky police drama about odd happenings in a small town in Wisconsin.

Moss became known to a wider public by playing Zoey Bartlet, the president’s eldest daughter, on White House drama “The West Wing.”

A student at Georgetown University, Zoey Bartlet became the center of several episodes. Her relationsh­ip with an African American man set off a white supremacis­t attack, while separately her French boyfriend drugs her, causing a crisis.

Moss began to take more ambitious roles as an adult. At age 24 she started to play Peggy Olson in “Mad Men” — a cerebral secretary who tries to work her way up but keeps fighting to get ahead in a macho, male-dominated advertisin­g agency.

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Elisabeth Moss

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