The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

After ‘Mad Men,’ Elisabeth Moss is headed to Broadway

The actress has prior experience taking the stage.

- By Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK — The cocktail of choice for Elisabeth Moss these days is very post-”Mad Men.”

“It’s close to 5:30, isn’t it?” she asks a waitress at a chic bar in the theater district one recent afternoon.

“I’ll do a vodka ginger ale, please. A little light on the vodka.”

No Don Draper-style whiskey sours or martinis for Moss, who has left her beloved character Peggy Olson to play the title character in “The Heidi Chronicles” on Broadway.

Today’s drink is as much a pick-me-up as a way to unwind after a long day of rehearsal. Moss, whose features and personalit­y are softer and lighter in person than the buttoned-up Peggy, admits she’s only recent- ly found out what she’s signed up for.

“It’s physically far more challengin­g than I thought it was, mentally far more challengin­g. I don’t know why I didn’t realize that,” Moss said.

“I’m like, ‘Wow. Ballsy move, Moss. You really took on something bigger than you’ve done before. But that’s what I want to do.”

The play is a series of sketches stretching over 24 years from the late 1960s to 1989 that playwright Wendy Wasserstei­n uses to trace Heidi Holland’s changing ideas about herself, about men and about other women.

Moss, 32, had known of the play, which won a 1989 Pulitzer and a Tony for best play, but she hadn’t read or seen it. The mix of comedy and drama instantly attracted her: “It’s my favorite thing to do — to do both in one thing.”

She’s a stage veteran, having made her Broadway debut in “Speed-thePlow” with Jeremy Piven in 2008 and most recently starring with Keira Knightley in Lillian Hellman’s “The Children’s Hour” in London in 2011.

The end of “Mad Men” — the last few episodes air in April — has been looming for some time, but Moss said she was still pretty emotional by the last day of filming.

“It sounds so silly because obviously you never want to equate the ending of a show with something that’s actually dramatic and emotional — like life. But we’d known each other for nine years and the only thing I can equate it to is how you might have felt when leaving four years of college,” she said.

 ??  ?? With “Mad Men” ending, Elisabeth Moss is set to play the lead in “The Heidi Chronicles” on Broadway.
With “Mad Men” ending, Elisabeth Moss is set to play the lead in “The Heidi Chronicles” on Broadway.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States