Blessed be the fruit, eight times over. Emmy voters handed The Handmaidâs Tale another nomination for outstanding drama on Thursday, but even more notable is the showâs clean sweep of eight acting nods in four categories: lead actress, supporting actress, supporting actor, and guest actress.
âIâm proud of them. Iâm proud to be one of them. Iâm proud to be part of this team,â Handmaidâs Tale showrunner Bruce Miller said over the phone after the nominations were announced. âFrom the outside, when your name is on the list, it all seems very clean, neat, and tidy. But, you know, Burton J. LeBlanc, our makeup man, whose department is nominated, thatâs a job he does 20 hours a day, when itâs three degrees below zero. And does it five days a week, in Canada, for months and months and months, with good humor, with incredible artistry, with patience. That kind of day-to-day, in-and-out genius is so wonderful to see recognized.â
Below, Vulture asked Miller to assess the performances of each of the nominated actors, and what each brought to their roles in the Hulu dramaâs dark and brutal second season.
Elisabeth Moss as June (Lead Actress in a Drama)
âElisabeth just is the Handmaid of The Handmaidâs Tale. She brings her heart and her soul and all her years of experience to the role, but I think what she brings to the role, honestly, is us. Sheâs the way that I feel that I connect to the show â through her character.â
Yvonne Strahovski as Serena Joy (Supporting Actress in a Drama)
âYvonne brings sympathy to the unsympathetic and she brings an absolute level of strength for that character that is unfathomably deep. It is a very complicated, difficult character that she plays with such precision. Itâs a miracle of a performance. You feel bad for this woman whoâs doing such horrible things.â
Alexis Bledel as Emily (Supporting Actress in a Drama)
âAlexis has a quiet, terrifying, coiled-up anger and fury that comes from this deep, deep, deep place inside her. I donât think she carries around much darkness, but she plays that darkness in Emily so beautifully â the darkness of loss, the darkness of a mother who is separated from their child. She plays the dark depth of that character. It gives you goose bumps to watch her do it.â
Ann Dowd as Aunt Lydia (Supporting Actress in a Drama)
âAnn is the most wonderful woman playing the most terrible woman. The thing that she brings to that character is a sense of duty â and I know itâs weird, but what Ann brings to that character is warmth. Thatâs what makes Aunt Lydia come alive.â
Cherry Jones as Holly Maddox (Guest Actress in a Drama)
âCherry Jones just brought Holly to life. Sheâs a huge character in the book, and we were always wondering how could we live up to this character who is kind of an icon of a certain age of feminism. The thing that Cherry brings to the role is this grounded realism, and a version of familiar and motherly love that you donât often see on TV with that kind of complexity. Sheâs wonderful.â
Samira Wiley as Moira (Guest Actress in a Drama)
âI love her. Samira plays a character with a tough shell and a soft mushy center in a way that you feel like you know her better than she knows herself. I have no idea how she does [it].â
ďťżKelly Jenrette as Lukeâs ex-wife, Annie (Guest Actress in a Drama)
âOh, she was wonderful. The thing that she brought to this character â who, when offscreen, is nothing but an impediment â she brought her to life in the most beautiful, sympathetic, genuine, complicated, frustrated way. She put the face on a whole relationship and a whole life that totally changed the way [June] saw her husband and the genesis of her marriage. She carried so much in this small bit of work. She filled out areas of the world that we just didnât see, except through that experience with her and through her eyes.â
Joseph Fiennes as Commander Fred Waterford (Supporting Actor in a Drama)
âA thankless role! He plays a tortured torturer. He is, in a lot of ways, a man who sees himself as a very good man, a moral man, a man who is trying to make a change in the world, and is forced to do these things that are gradually turning him into something he doesnât recognize. Itâs a remarkable exploration of what happens when youâre being transformed into something you donât like.â
This post has been corrected to show that The Handmaidâs Tale actors received eight Emmy nominations this year.