Newsweek

Margaret Atwood and Bruce Miller on 'Handmaid's Tale'

The author and showrunner had a big issue to tackle in adapting Gilead for modern-day TV: race.
Margaret Atwood on the set of 'The Handmaid's Tale' while filming a cameo for Season 1.
HMT_101_GK_0916_0185rt_f

For 33 years, readers of The Handmaid’s Tale reached the end of the book and thought, What happens next? Now, thanks to Bruce Miller, there’s an answer. He is the executive producer of the critically acclaimed, Emmy-winning adaptation of Margaret Atwood’s classic 1985 dystopian novel, which returned to Hulu on April 25. The first two episodes of second season picked up where the novel and the Season 1 finale left off: Offred (played by Elisabeth Moss) getting into a van that will either take her, as Atwood wrote, “into the darkness within; or else the light.”

And so to Miller’s task: extending the author’s tale beyond the pages of her novel, much as the writers of did with Tom Perrotta’s book. Rather than

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek7 min read
The Secret to Being an ADHD Whisperer
Penn and Kim Holderness are widely celebrated for their entertaining viral parody videos (singing included!) on topics ranging from parenting and helping kids with homework and masking up for the pandemic (to the tune of the Hamilton soundtrack) to “
Newsweek1 min read
Port Crisis
The Coast Guard leads the search on March 27 for six victims following the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge, which occurred when the cargo ship Dali collided with it the day before. The 984-foot vessel, carrying nearly 4,700 containers, struc
Newsweek4 min read
Penn & Kim Holderness
Newsweek _ What made you want to write this book? Penn Holderness _ You write the book you need. I knew that I needed to write this book when I saw that raising a family added a new level of difficulty to my brain being able to handle multiple tasks

Related