New York Post

‘TALE’ FROM THE DARK SIDE

Bledel sheds ‘cutesy’ image in Hulu ‘Handmaid’s’ drama

- By ROBERT RORKE

'GILMORE Girls” fans may not recognize Alexis Bledel in “The Handmaid’s Tale,” debuting Wednesday on Hulu. Can this young woman in the long red robe and “Flying Nun” headdress really be Rory Gilmore? “I really don’t know” how fans will react, says Bledel, 35. “It’s hard for me to have perspectiv­e on that.” With this performanc­e as Ofglen, the rebel handmaid in the newest adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s science fiction classic, the Houstonbor­n Bledel formally says goodbye to the goody-goody image she fostered on “Gilmore Girls.” She plays the doeeyed agitator in the regime known as Gilead, where women are not allowed to vote, hold a job, read or even use their own names. They are classified as property and called by the name of the Commander to whom they belong — hence “Of Glen” and “Of FredFred” (Elisabeth Moss)) —— and used purely for the purpose of breeding. In Atwood’s nightmaris­h society, Handmaids aree never alone andnd are expected to police each other’sther’s behavior. Ofglen is partnered with Offred to do the daily shopping, and that’s when Ofglen takes the opportunit­y to encourage her fellow Handmaid to help the resistance group she has joined. “There’s an eye in your house,” she says. “Be careful.” “Ofglen has many layers because she had a whole life before Gilead,” says Bledel. “There’s this wonderful complexity to her that I was excited about. It told me I had to do the role.” Executive producer Bruce Miller knew Bledel’s work from “Gilmore Girls” and “Mad Men” [she played Beth Dawes], while his daughter loved Bledel’s work on the big screen in the “Traveling Pants” movies. “She has such a light touch,” he says of Bledel. “And that face is so expressive. I was thrilled she was coming to work with us.”

Clothing plays a major role in the women’s subjugatio­n and Bledel’s descriptio­n of wearing the Handmaid’s headdress conveys the confinemen­t faced by the character.

“There’s a limited field of vision,” she says. “The wings really do block you on the side, so trying to have a conversati­on with somebody can be tricky. You can’t take many cues from [the other actors’] facial expression­s, so you’re clearly going off the sound of their voice and what they don’t say.”

There are also combat-style boots and the crimson robes that conceal the Handmaid’s bodies. When Ofglen’s subversive activities bring her unwelcome attention, she is made to wear a muzzle. “It was made of thick cloth muslin,” Bledel says. “It’s supposed to be a gag. Keeps her from protesprot­esting.” BBledel, born in 1981, wwas too young to read AAtwood’s book when it was first published in 1985. But she consumed the novel when she was offered the role. “I loved the ending. It surprised mme in a way that was so rerewardin­g,” she says. “And alonalong the way, there’s so many ggreat characters that you really care about deeply.” The actress described the atmosphere on the Toronto set as “pretty relaxed and creative and conducive to being focused.” It helped that she wasn’t “actually in Gilead” and “was pretending to be scared,” she says. Bledel filmed one of the series’ most horrifying scenes late at night in a real hospital. “It felt a little bit sci-fi compared to the rest of the shoot, [like] we were in some experiment­al, futuristic place,” she says. “Ofglen has the feeling of waking up and not knowing what happened to her.

“What she finds out is so much worse.”

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