USA TODAY International Edition

‘Mrs. Maisel’ expands outside of New York

- Patrick Ryan

NEW YORK – On a recent morning at a temporary re-creation of the storied but now-shuttered Carnegie Deli, Alex Borstein is everywhere you turn.

“Look! There’s another one,” says the actress, whose face is plastered across the mock “Carnegie Wall of Fame” along with photos of her “Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” co-stars. Borstein is seated in a ‘50s-style booth of the iconic Jewish deli, reopened to promote Amazon Prime’s second season of the Emmy-winning comedy, streaming Wednesday. But unlike Susie, the gruff, cash-strapped manager she plays on the show, Borstein’s not shoveling down the pile of hot pastrami and pickles set before her.

“There’s nothing to keep you from eating too much like looking at pictures of yourself,” Borstein jokes.

Literally and figuratively, Susie is hungrier than ever in Season 2, as she hustles to book gigs for sole client Midge Maisel (Rachel Brosnahan), an outspoken ‘50s housewife turned aspiring stand-up comic, who’s attempting to get back on her feet after facing personal and profession­al setbacks.

Not only has she been blackliste­d from comedy clubs since bad-mouthing star comedian Sophie Lennon (Jane Lynch) at the end of last season, but she’s been demoted from makeupcoun­ter girl to switchboar­d operator after an altercatio­n with her estranged husband’s girlfriend at the B. Altman’s department store where she works.

“She’s trying to clean up the giant mess she’s made and get back on top,” Brosnahan says. That includes reaching an understand­ing with husband Joel (Michael Zegen), who’s still hurt by her searing jokes about him on stage and gives her an ultimatum: choose comedy or their relationsh­ip.

Over the course of 10 new episodes, “they get to know each other better than perhaps they ever did during their marriage,” Brosnahan says. “They love each other very deeply and want to try to make it work for their kids, but obviously can’t be together right now.”

Even as she gets a potential new love interest, Midge’s friendship with Susie is still at the core of “Marvelous.”

“They’re kind of learning how different they really are,” Borstein says. “Midge has been coddled her whole life and Susie’s scrapping to survive, so it’s like this very tame house cat and feral cat trying to make it together.”

The “Marvelous” universe gets bigger, as Midge travels to the Catskills on an extended holiday and, in the season premiere, jets off to Paris to try and save her parents’ (Tony Shalhoub and Marin Hinkle) marriage. The cast and crew flew to France to film the episode, in which Midge performs an impromptu comedy set at a Paris bar while a French woman translates in real time, which Brosnahan describes as “one of the most challengin­g things I’ve ever shot.”

For the married producing team of Amy Sherman-Palladino and Dan Palladino (”Gilmore Girls”), it was important to get Midge out of New York.

Midge “is soon going to become a road comic. and the life of a comedian is mostly lived outside of the home,” DanielPall­adino says. “New York is always going to be her base, but to keep it real, she is going to be out in the world more.”

 ?? ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY ?? Rachel Brosnahan visits a pop-up version of the Carnegie Deli in New York.
ROBERT DEUTSCH/USA TODAY Rachel Brosnahan visits a pop-up version of the Carnegie Deli in New York.

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