Baltimore Sun

‘Flight Attendant’ balances spy world, relationsh­ips in season 2

- By Kate Feldman

A year out from the first season finale of “The Flight Attendant,” Cassie Bowden is newly sober, settled down in Los Angeles and on the payroll of the CIA. And for just a brief second, it seems like this all could be working.

But the joy of the show, which recently returned to HBO Max for its second season, is watching Cassie, played by Kaley Cuoco, spiral.

“A big conversati­on that we had right off the bat was, ‘Well, she isn’t drunk anymore, so we don’t get to have the same fun,’ ” said showrunner Steve Yockey. “But we do, because the alcohol was just masking the underlying issues. She’s still addicted to thrills, she’s still overinvest­ed in other people’s business, she still has all these flaws.”

“Over-invested” is a generous descriptio­n for the flight attendant who found herself in the middle of internatio­nal espionage last season because she couldn’t stand down. This year, she’s more willingly heading into the unknown at the direction of her handler, Benjamin Berry (Mo McRae) and his boss Dot (Cheryl Hines).

From the outside, it’s obvious that it’s only a matter of time before Cassie’s world falls apart again. She either knows that and doesn’t care or is too headstrong to see it.

But her friends aren’t helping either.

“Annie and Max, Annie probably more so than Max, but Max by proxy, are dealing with some very real-life issues, and I think Cassie’s insanity is an easier thing to put their attention toward as opposed to their relationsh­ip woes,” said Zosia Mamet, who plays Cassie’s

best friend Annie.

“The Flight Attendant’s” world gets bigger in its second season, not just in terms of Cassie’s world travels but in her growing circle of friends and enemies. Alongside her brother (T.R. Knight) comes her estranged mother, played by Sharon Stone. A new flight attendant (Mae Martin) only raises more questions. Benjamin tries to leash her, only to realize that she can’t be tamed. But suddenly Cassie is fighting multiples of herself: life-of-the-party Cassie, depressed and cynical Cassie, annoyingly perfect Cassie. As the chaos grows, the voices get louder.

“Part of Cassie’s appeal is that she is a person who crosses boundaries. She is a woman that is overinvolv­ed in people’s business, that makes mistakes, that makes impulsive decisions, that sleeps with the wrong person,” said showrunner Natalie Chaidez.

“I think that endears us to her as a female character; we see a woman who is stumbling and doing her best. We see ourselves in her and block the screen and cringe when she makes those mistakes, and we love her for that. We’re rooting for her.”

At the same time, “The Flight Attendant” takes

great care to balance Cassie’s spy world with quieter moments and relationsh­ips. She argues with her mother and her boyfriend. Annie applies for jobs. Megan (Rosie Perez) fights to find her way back to her family.

“We need those real moments,” Perez said.

“All the real moments are about connection­s, are about relationsh­ips, either with other people or with yourself.”

Cassie wants to believe she can manage it all: her personal life, her sobriety, her CIA work. But she can’t keep it all straight. She sees shadows in the darkness and spies at the baggage carousel.

“She’s essentiall­y playing the Jimmy Stewart role in any Hitchcock film. She’s getting involved in other people’s business, going too far and doesn’t have boundaries in the way that normal people do. The only thing that’s different about it is she happens to be a woman, which I think is long overdue,” Yockey said.

“But it’s a lot of fun to have all of these female characters ... playing what would typically be male tropes on a different show and then have the men sort of playing the sidekick female roles. It’s nice to upend that.”

 ?? JULIA TERJUNG/HBO MAX ?? Kaley Cuoco as Cassie Bowden and Mo McRae as Benjamin Berry in “The Flight Attendant.”
JULIA TERJUNG/HBO MAX Kaley Cuoco as Cassie Bowden and Mo McRae as Benjamin Berry in “The Flight Attendant.”

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