Arab Times

‘Marvelous Mrs Maisel’ talks expanding world in Season 2

‘More of a family show’

-

EBy Danielle Turchiano

verything is bigger in the second season of “The Marvelous Mrs Maisel” – from its episode count (10 total, up two from its freshman year), to the talent Midge (Rachel Brosnahan) exhibits when she steps on standup stages, to the scope of the world, which stretches beyond 1950s Manhattan to visit the Catskills, as well as Paris. But for co-creators and executive producers Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino, the biggest move they made in the second season was expanding insight into the characters that surround Midge.

“Our prime thing is always the story – where is the story going and that all of the characters are represente­d. The show is called ‘The Marvelous Mrs Maisel’ but we consider this more of a family show than a show that is solely about a standup comedian,” Palladino tells Variety.

“Maisel” Season 2 showed a completely new side to Midge’s mother Rose (Marin Hinkle), for example, when she left Abe (Tony Shalhoub) and moved to Paris after feeling betrayed by being kept in the dark about so many parts of her family’s life in the first season.

“One day she woke up and it was like everything she thought was wrong and it was that moment of, ‘What have I been basing everything on?’” Sherman-Palladino says.

After Rose realized she was not happy, the Palladinos wanted to bring her “mentally, and then physically ... back to a point where she was unabashedl­y happy.” Before she was a wife and a mother, Rose spent time studying in Paris and naturally gravitated back there at this point in her life when she was questionin­g “if everything that I’ve placed importance on is bulls--, what on Earth does that make my life and what does that make me?” says ShermanPal­ladino.

Shocking

“It was such an extraordin­ary catapult of lightning that was so shocking and so new,” Hinkle says of where she found Rose at the start of the season. “It was a joy to be a fish out of water both as a performer and as a character. It kind of defined the other-worldlines­s of what she’s experienci­ng by me not knowing what I’d be in for.”

Production actually traveled to Paris to film parts of the first two episodes of the season. Those scenes were the first ones up for the second year, which Brosnahan says made it feel like they were “headed into a completely different kind of show.”

“We felt immediatel­y like it was going to be bigger in every sense of the word. There’s a different energy in Paris than there is in New York and working with a partially Parisian crew – I think it does make those scenes stand out,” she says.

Similarly, Brosnahan says the middle-ofthe-season trip to upstate New York for the characters offered slightly different working vibes as well, because they traveled and stayed together in lodging in Binghamton. “We went to ‘Maisel’ camp,” she says, “and I think the familial experience that we were having offcamera definitely influences the way it feels on-camera.”

Visiting upstate New York in the story was something Palladino says he and ShermanPal­ladino wanted to do from the moment they were pitching the series to Amazon.

The on-screen trip to the Catskills was yet another opportunit­y to dig into the personalit­ies of characters such as Rose, who Hinkle feels is truly in her element among her friends. “In the pilot there was a stage direction that said, ‘Rose enters as if in her own MGM musical.’ And I feel like when we’re in the Catskills she’s in her summer musical and she can dance to her heart’s content,” she shares. “That world of women congregati­ng was probably a place of relief and release that in Manhattan these women didn’t have as easily, so those scenes were really delicious.”

And it was also a prime opportunit­y to introduce the character of Benjamin (Zachary Levi), a man whose own mother calls him weird simply because he does not accept the traditiona­l gender roles of the time period.

“He’s a little Spock-ish. He values reason and logic over most other sentiment,” Levi says of the character. “I think he’s someone who’s always in business mode because he likes it and it gives him order and purpose in life – but Midge is kind of the first thing to throw that into another zone.”

Pursue

When the two meet, Midge has “shelved” the idea of romance, Brosnahan says, so she isn’t looking to pursue anything with Benjamin. But as they spend time together, and he does her a favor by driving her back to the city so she can take a job opportunit­y, the things they have in common – and the way they push each other – become much clearer.

“She asks questions that other women of the time might not ask, so that’s a challenge. Her dragging him out of his comfort zone and taking him to places he’s not used to definitely opens his world view,” Levi points out. “He has never met a girl like her – like most people have never met a girl like her. And just that alone – his feelings for her as they grow – that’s challengin­g him more than anything. Midge throws everybody off-kilter. That’s what she does. You kind of get swept up in this storm of Midge Maisel. She’s so charming and she’s so charismati­c and intelligen­t and talented that the whirlwind wins.”

In some ways, Benjamin is like the other men in Midge’s life. Like her father, he cares about logic, reason, and routine, Levi notes. Like Joel (Michael Zegen), he has “the humor and the energy ... and a little bit of ego – bravado – going on,” says Sherman-Palladino. But unlike them, Benjamin is not upset or threatened by her talent, Levi says. And that is what becomes key to their relationsh­ip, despite the fact that Sherman-Palladino admits that Joel “will probably be the love of her life for the rest of her life.”

Being the forward-thinking woman that she is, though, Midge wasn’t willing to compromise, let alone give up, her budding success in the standup world for a relationsh­ip. And Joel has admitted that he is not comfortabl­e being talked about in her act, making her career the new mistress between them.

“The whole point is you go up and you talk about your life,” Brosnahan says, “and her comedy will always be drawn from her life and what she’s experienci­ng in that given moment, or what she experience­d earlier that day, or what she experience­d earlier that year. That’s her secret weapon. That’s what she’s good at, and I don’t think that’s going to change.” (RTRS)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait