USA TODAY International Edition

Netflix’s ‘ Away’ offers Swank her space shot

- Patrick Ryan

Hilary Swank has always wanted to be among the stars. But we’re not talking Brad or Leo.

“I wanted to be an astronaut before I wanted to be an actor, which was about the age of 9,” Swank says. “It still has the same feeling for me now as it did then, the whole idea of something bigger than us and the unknown. I still would love to go to space someday, but being an actor and playing an astronaut is second best.”

Swank, a two- time Oscar- winner, gets that chance in the Netflix drama “Away” ( streaming Sept. 4), from producer Jason Katims (“Parenthood,” “Friday Night Lights”).

Set in the near future, the 10- episode first season dramatizes the first human- led expedition to Mars, commanded by pragmatic American astronaut Emma Green ( Swank). Emma leads an internatio­nal crew of scientists and astronauts, whose backstorie­s and families we come to know over the course of the season. Members of the team initially question Emma’s leadership abilities, while she wrestles with distance from and guilt over leaving her teenage daughter ( Talitha Bateman) and husband ( Josh Charles) on Earth.

The series is loosely based on a 2014 Esquire story by Chris Jones, about the first American astronaut to spend a year in space.

“I don’t consider myself a space show guy, but there was something about this article that really gripped me,” Katims says. “It was a different way of thinking about space: this very intimate look at what the human experience was like to be away for so long, how to stay connected to the world, and what it does to your mind and body. That seemed so different.”

Shortly after launch, Emma’s husband, Matt, suffers a stroke caused by a rare vascular disease known as cerebral cavernous malformati­on. Emma considers leaving the mission to help with Matt’s recovery, but he and their daughter, Alexis, insist she press on. That story line especially resonated with Andrew Hinderaker, who created the show with Katims and executive producer Jessica Goldberg.

“There’s a moment in the article that talks about an astronaut being up in the Internatio­nal Space Station when something really catastroph­ic

happens to his family, and what that is to be so far away,” Hinderaker says. “I’ve been in a long- distance relationsh­ip with a woman who was diagnosed with a progressiv­e disease just shortly before Jason had brought me the article, so that moment of finding out that someone you love is in trouble and needs you and you’re away ( working) was something that resonated really deeply.”

Charles, who’s best known for CBS’ “The Good Wife,” says he found the show’s combinatio­n of cosmic and interperso­nal drama “intriguing. ( Director) Ed Zwick said that every marriage is like a mission to Mars. And while funny, it also really stuck with me. The potential of exploring this couple and this family during this trying time seemed rich.”

To prepare for the role, Swank, 46, spoke extensivel­y to former astronaut Mike Massimino and attended a socalled “boot camp,” where she learned wire work for the series’ zero gravity space scenes.

“We were on these wires all the time trying to learn to move gracefully, which is something I don’t do. I’m kind of lumbering,” Swank says. In addition to the stunts, “the most challengin­g thing was doing a monologue that’s emotional while other people are floating by. You get kicked in the face and you just start laughing.”

For Swank and the creators, the show’s emphasis on science and teamwork couldn’t come at a more apt time, as many of us continue to isolate at home with family or others due to COVID- 19. One particular­ly prescient episode finds Ram ( Ray Panthaki), an astronaut from India, falling gravely ill with a virus. He is quarantine­d from the rest of the crew, who wear protective gear and try to treat him from a safe distance.

“If someone had said this ( pandemic) would be happening right when we wrapped filming ( last winter), I wouldn’t have been able to believe it,” Swank says. “There’s probably nothing more isolating than going to space for three years, but I think people ( now) are going to relate to that more and understand it a little deeper. This pandemic has put into perspectiv­e what’s important in life, which is our health and really being able to be with loved ones.”

 ?? DIYAH PERA/ NETFLIX ?? Emma Green ( Hilary Swank) suits up for a mission to Mars in Netflix’s “Away.”
DIYAH PERA/ NETFLIX Emma Green ( Hilary Swank) suits up for a mission to Mars in Netflix’s “Away.”
 ?? RACHEL LUNA/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Swank, who won Oscars for “Boys Don't Cry” and “Million Dollar Baby,” says she has spent quarantine trying to learn to play guitar and watching HBO’s “I Know This Much Is True.”
RACHEL LUNA/ GETTY IMAGES Swank, who won Oscars for “Boys Don't Cry” and “Million Dollar Baby,” says she has spent quarantine trying to learn to play guitar and watching HBO’s “I Know This Much Is True.”
 ?? DIYAH PERA/ NETFLIX ?? Alexis ( Talitha Bateman) helps care for her dad, Matt ( Josh Charles), while Emma is in space.
DIYAH PERA/ NETFLIX Alexis ( Talitha Bateman) helps care for her dad, Matt ( Josh Charles), while Emma is in space.

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