logo
Madeline Brewer Is ‘Very Happy' With Janine's Ending in 'The Handmaid's Tale'

Madeline Brewer Is ‘Very Happy' With Janine's Ending in 'The Handmaid's Tale'

Elle6 days ago

Major spoilers below.
If there was any character that The Handmaid's Tale fans were praying would get a happy ending in the series finale, it was Janine, the feisty, and at times delusional, handmaid played by Madeline Brewer. Like all those forced to don red in Gilead, Janine has been through hell and back, but season 6 was particularly brutal: Throughout the show's last 10 episodes, viewers find out that Janine has been forced into a life of sex work at Jezebel's. When Commander Wharton (Josh Charles) then shuts down the brothel, Janine watches as her friends get violently murdered, and she gets reassigned to be a handmaid for the abusive and obsessive Commander Bell (Timothy Simons).
Even after Mayday retakes the city of Boston, and Bell is murdered, Janine is still trapped in Gilead—until one night when she's delivered across the border and into June's (Elisabeth Moss) arms. Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd) and Naomi Lawrence née Putnam (Ever Carradine) appear soon after, finally ready to give Janine her daughter, Charlotte, back. 'I know [fans] are [getting] what they've been asking for, and insisting upon, for seasons and seasons now,' Brewer tells ELLE of the emotional reunion. 'Every time I post anything about Handmaid's, [the comments are] like, 'I just need her to get into Canada with Charlotte.''
Below, the actress gives her full thoughts on Janine's resolution, filming the episode's dream karaoke sequence (featuring a few deceased characters), and the parallels between Handmaid's Tale and Brewer's other talked-about series, You.
I was just saying earlier today that I was like, I'm ready, I'm ready, I'm ready. And now that the final episode is [airing], I'm like, No, I'm not ready for it to be over. It is just always a little bit anxiety-inducing to meet the end of a very major chapter of your life.
I've been really proud since season 4...She's been allowed to evolve. They didn't try to keep her as the crazy, screw-loose [handmaid], a little bit of almost comic relief at times. They allowed her to become more fully grounded between season 4 and season 6. So, season 6 has been especially gratifying to me as an actor. Janine is grounded. She has a purpose, but she's willing at the drop of a hat to help her friends.
No, I don't have any say in anything. But one of our writers told me in season 4, 'We're not killing you. It's just not going to happen. I think that's something we've pretty firmly decided will not happen.' So, I was like, I wonder how this will end then. I found out reading the script. Lizzie [Moss] had said something to me during season 6, something like, 'I think you'll be very happy with where you end up.' And I am. I'm very happy with where Janine lands and with whom she lands. It's just such a beautiful moment of these four women—Naomi, Lydia, Janine, and June—and the sacrifices that they've all made.
I've called it a quiet ending, because it's so peaceful for me. It's not chaotic and bombs going off and a plane blowing up. It's such a beautifully peaceful, quiet, earned ending for a character who has been through so much. And she's the one that you'd think is going to go out with a real bang and a real fight. I'm so glad that she just gets to quietly go into the next phase of her life.
I never really allowed myself to do that, because I think part of me, despite what they told me, thought Janine would die in Gilead, maybe in the fight or something...I'm glad that I just let it be. And I trust our writers.
I think with all of the chaos of what happens in the days prior, and some of the things Serena has been saying to Naomi, it really cuts to the core that Naomi is a mother. She's been a mother to this girl. Especially seeing [Commander] Lawrence with Charlotte, I think it just changes something for her. Because when we think about the timeline, Naomi would've been raised to read books and to form her own opinions. And regardless of what she believes in this patriarchal structure, I think she wants her daughter to know how to read. I think she wants her to know how to form her own opinions and experience the most out of life, and she knows it's not going to happen in Gilead.
It's a really beautiful sacrifice that Naomi makes where she, for the first time it seems, casts aside her own ego and her own hatred of these handmaids, and puts the life and happiness of her daughter [first].
Oh, it was beautiful. Nina [Kiri, who plays Alma, who died in season 4] and Bahia [Watson, who plays Brianna, who also died in season 4] are two of my closest friends, so to have them back, to see Alexis [Bledel, who plays Emily] after so many years...It was a beautiful moment. It was bittersweet, which is how I think we've all described the ending.
But that is a callback to season 1 where I'm on the bridge, and June is trying to get Janine to come down, and she's like, 'We could drink margaritas and do karaoke.' It's such a beautiful callback to their friendship and the way these women have saved each other, repeatedly, and in a different world, in a different time, they could have been friends...It was really nice to just think about what could have been. It was also a beautiful goodbye for all of us.
I think that's really what they wanted. To say: Our final image of these women together is not going to be in strife. Let's remember them as what they could have been together.
There's too much history and too much guilt, and resentment, and love, and fear that they could only just part ways. Janine recognizes what Lydia did for her. And I think Lydia cannot move forward without doing this. But I don't think that absolves anyone of their participation, speaking only for Janine and Lydia. I think that guilt will haunt Lydia for a very long time. What she learns in episodes 9 and 10 of this series sets up The Testaments.
But I don't think their relationship could ever meet peace. There's just too much history. Let's say they both ended up in Canada and were living normal lives. I don't think they'd go out for coffee. It's like, this is over now, because this is all we can be to each other, is this relationship. This can't take on another life in another place and time.
She just texted me this morning!
I've worked with so many brilliant actors on The Handmaid's Tale that it would be impossible not to take with me some of the technical things I've learned as an actor. But what I'll take with me, from Ann specifically, is that is the warmest and most generous human being you will ever meet in your life. As archaic as it is, and icky as it is sometimes, it's a caste system on a set. It's hierarchical, and you don't really step out of your rank, which is insane. Ann has a way of being at the top of the totem pole and making every single person feel like her closest friend. She has a way of touching every person and making them feel heard, and wanted, and valued in just a quick interaction. She makes sure to thank everyone, all of our crew, all of our background [actors], our crafty, everybody. I've seen the warmth that she brings to people. And I will take that with me because it changes your life. She's magic.
Lizzie doesn't blink. She blinks, of course, but she has a way of maintaining eye contact and connection where I think most people might shy away. I have trouble with eye contact—I'm looking anywhere but in someone's eyes. And watching her, that connection is so powerful and engaging.
That was when all of the Jezebels get shot. It was like my body was ignited. It was so hard, but necessary. She's lost so much, Janine. That was one of the only things she was really living for. She was living for Charlotte, but her purpose was with these women, her friends, her sisters, and she can't save them. There's nothing she can do. It's just so utterly devastating.
Janine has just made me a better person. She's smarter, and funnier, and more compassionate, and stronger. She's so many things I'm not and that I aspire to be.
She is smart! That's the thing about Janine that I've always loved and admired is that she knows how to survive. When we meet her in seasons 1 and 2, and she's checked out, it's because that's how she's going to get through. Because, otherwise, what? Is she supposed to meet despair and torture every day?
And in the meantime, that sisterhood—with Alma, Brianna, and June—uplifts her and holds her, as she does them. It really drives home for me the truth that we are nothing without our sisterhoods, whatever they may look like. Our sisterhoods, our brotherhoods, our everythings. Our communities are how we get through.
Not between the characters, but definitely thematically. I guess that's part of the zeitgeist right now. That's a reflection of a bit of our world. Handmaid's Tale, You, Adolescence—these are conversations that are being had on large and small screens because they are part of our lives. Patriarchy hurts everyone. And in our own way, in Handmaid's Tale and You, we're trying to help people understand that fact and that it's not an admonishment of maleness, it's not an indictment of masculinity, but it is worthy of conversation.
Especially with You coming out, I naively assumed most of the fans were young women and girls like me. And it's a lot of men, really boys, like 18- to 23-year-olds. They idolize this man [Joe]. They want to model themselves after him because, to them, he is the perfect picture of masculinity. He's strong, powerful, clever, charming, good looking, he's rich at the end, and he gets the girl nine times out of 10. I can see on the surface why they admire him, but they're doing mental acrobatics, or it's not bothering them, the cognitive dissonance of the man they admire is also a murderer. I think for some of them, unfortunately, the murder makes him even better—the fact that he's willing to go the distance to punish a woman for what she has done to him. The conversations around the two shows... I want to be in a Netflix Christmas movie. [Laughs] I'm so tired. No, I do love it. And this is the greater picture around getting to be an actor. I get to be on shows where the conversations are important and interesting. And I feel sorry that the boys who are mad at me for playing Bronte [in You], I'm sorry that they don't have better role models.
I was at a meeting at Netflix, and they were like, 'What do you want to do?' And I was like, 'I would love to do a Christmas movie.' And they were like, 'Really? That's not really your thing.' And I'm like, 'It could be.'
I love a musical. I'm a musical theater girl.
It would take several years, but I would want to be Mama Rose in Gypsy. Then, of course, after seeing Sunset Blvd., I simply must play Norma Desmond, who I'm obsessed with from the film. But there are so many great shows out there and great roles for women in musical theater and more being written. I think theater is having a really great time right now, and I'm excited to join.
I have a few irons in the fire and things I'm cooking up. I want to go back to theater. I live in New York, so that's where my heart is. I'm getting married in less than two months. So I'm like, Nothing can hurt me right now. I get to get married to the love of my life. I feel a lot of possibility. I feel like the world is my oyster. I just finished two extraordinary shows. I'm very proud of them. And I can't wait to see what's next in store for me.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bizarre Apartment Window Feature Sparks Debate: 'So Scary'
Bizarre Apartment Window Feature Sparks Debate: 'So Scary'

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Bizarre Apartment Window Feature Sparks Debate: 'So Scary'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A video of an apartment in the United Kingdom featuring "cheese grater" windows with doors that open "into nothing" has gone viral on TikTok. The 24-year-old resident of the apartment, Jess Bell, shared a clip of the intriguing home feature from her TikTok account @jessbelllll, where it has amassed 1.6 million views since it was posted on June 1. Text overlaid on the video reads: "POV [point of view] everyone hates your cheese grater windows but they're one of your favorite features of the apartment." The clip shows a door set between two floor-to-ceiling glass panels along a wall in the apartment. Bell is shown opening the door to reveal a grated wall behind it. Bell, who is based in Manchester, a city in northern England, told Newsweek that she has lived in this apartment for nearly two years and all the apartments in the building come with these windows. Screenshots from a viral TikTok video showcasing a door on a wall with an unusual "cheese grater" window behind it. Screenshots from a viral TikTok video showcasing a door on a wall with an unusual "cheese grater" window behind it. @jessbelllll on TikTok The apartment features two of these windows/doors and they "didn't deter me at all" from wanting to live there, she said. "I love the look of them and they actually let loads of light in and cool the flat down quickly." She said there are "no downsides at all except sometimes, if they're both open at once, it can cause a vortex." The viral post comes as homeowners in the United States face soaring housing costs. Millions of potential homebuyers have been "priced out of the market by elevated home prices and interest rates," according to a 2024 report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University. The report also found that a surge in rent during the COVID-19 pandemic has led to an "unprecedented affordability crisis" with around half of U.S. renter households burdened by housing costs. About 12.1 million households are "severely cost-burdened," with more than half of their income spent on housing expenses, according to the report. 'So Cool' vs. 'So Scary' A caption shared with the viral video says: "How are people seriously thinking these doors just go out into nothing." Bell, who is a full-time social media content creator specializing in fashion, lifestyle and home content, said she's posted various videos sharing her story of having to move apartments after being "kicked out" of her previous one. "So, it's really amazing people are finding my account from a cheese grater window video after the journey I've been on," she told Newsweek. She noted: "I guess I never expected to go viral for my if this leads people to watch my other videos and follow me from that, then it's a win." The viral clip has divided viewers on TikTok. Some were fearful about the safety risks of the unique feature, while others were confused about the purpose behind the unconventional design. Fria Bolan simply said it was "so scary." User @ozaaab4 agreed, saying: "Heck no. Not even with that. This gets me so anxious just looking at it and imagining awful things that can happen." Lifesastew wrote: "It's a ridiculous design," and @lakesuperiorsiren said: "The door concept makes zero sense. Just put a sliding window." Dragon496000 noted: "There is nothing about this I like. And not for any quality reasons, but because the sight of that open door leading to a straight drop fills me with an inescapable dread." Mads wrote: "The door leading to nothing is making me claustrophobic." Schnarfleharfle said: "I get the cheese grater part, but I don't understand why they didn't just use a glass door or a long window that opens inward with the cheese grater. A dark door stuck in the middle looks awful." Others didn't mind the window/door feature and marveled at the design. D said: "that's so cool," and Crystal Ransons DIY wrote: "That's actually amazing." Angel Lulu noted that it's "perfect for fresh air every day!" Do you have an interior design-related video or story to share? Let us know via life@ and your story could be featured on Newsweek.

Your Stories Q&A: Here's what's moving into the former Zebb's in Mattydale
Your Stories Q&A: Here's what's moving into the former Zebb's in Mattydale

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Your Stories Q&A: Here's what's moving into the former Zebb's in Mattydale

MATTYDALE, N.Y. (WSYR-TV) — You ask, we answer! Viewer Question: What's moving into the closed Zebb's in Mattydale? We have a juicy update on an old bar and grill known for great burgers, its own toppings bar, and great times. Man who lit Zebb's Restaurant on fire sentenced for multiple fires Zebb's, located in the Mattydale Plaza, closed last fall. It had been a staple on Route 11 for nearly 40 years. Something new is about to be on the menu. The owner of Maplewood Bar & Grill, Frank Bell, is renovating Zebb's and plans to open his restaurant this summer. Maplewood Bar & Grill recently closed inside the Holiday Inn Syracuse Airport, off 7th North Street. Bell said the restaurant had been open for more than three years before it shut its doors in February. Bell said he closed it, intending to relocate to another location. He said he's been looking for about a year for the perfect spot. He liked the former Zebb's because of its space. The restaurant has nearly 5,800 square feet of space. It's a homecoming of sorts for Bell, he worked at Zebb's decades ago. Right now, Bell is remodeling the inside. He said Zebb's had a very 1980s feel. The glass cubed walls have been removed, and other modern finishes are being added. It will also have a stage for live music. Bell said Maplewood Bar & Grill is known for its live music performances. We'll keep you posted on this summer's opening date! Submit a form. Your Stories Q&A: Here's what's moving into the former Zebb's in Mattydale Your Stories Q&A: What's next for closed Big Lots in Oswego? Your Stories Q&A: Here's when a popular diner will open at the former Salina Ponderosa Your Stories Q&A: With North Syracuse Rite Aid closing, what's next for iconic Sweetheart Corner Sign? North Syracuse neighbors not happy with new trash rollout Your Stories Q&A: Is construction starting on the final phases of Loop the Lake trail around Onondaga Lake? Your Stories Q&A: Dollar store proposed for old North Syracuse Walgreens Your Stories Update: New traffic light installed at 'dangerous' intersection Your Stories Q&A: Children's mental health center planned for vacant lot in Cicero Your Stories Q&A: When will Thruway exit 34A in DeWitt reopen? Your Stories Q&A: Uncle Chubby's in Clay reopening after being closed for 18 months Your Stories Q&A: What documents do I need to bring to DMV to get REAL ID? Your Stories Q&A: Is my Social Security number shown when a store scans my REAL ID license? 'Why do you have to live in a war zone if you're not part of the war?': Syracuse landlord frustrated by bullets on his block Your Stories Q&A: When will the new Chick-fil-A open in DeWitt? Your Stories Q&A: When will the rough ramp near Destiny USA get repaired? Do you need a REAL ID by May 7? What to know Your Stories Q&A: Is Byrne Dairy still replacing former TK Tavern in Camillus? Your Stories Q&A: An update on the future of Beck's Hotel in Mexico Your Stories Q&A: When will new comfort food restaurant open in Bridgeport? Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Everyone's Traveling to Kyoto Right Now—Here's Why
Everyone's Traveling to Kyoto Right Now—Here's Why

Elle

time3 hours ago

  • Elle

Everyone's Traveling to Kyoto Right Now—Here's Why

Every item on this page was chosen by an ELLE editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. Each spring in Kyoto, more than 500 people in traditional dress process through the streets for Aoi Matsuri, a festival with roots dating back to the 6th century. Some 1,500 years since it began, Aoi Matsuri remains one of Kyoto's most beloved annual events—and it's just one of many festivals held in the city throughout the year. For Gion Matsuri, which lasts for the entire month of July, locals are encouraged to wear summer-weight yukata kimonos to indulge in beer and street food and watch large-scale parades of colorful floats. Unlike the bustling, sometimes-claustrophobic streets of Tokyo, the world's largest city, Kyoto exudes a sense of serenity, a calmness that gives even greater meaning to these special events. Peel back the city's traditional exterior, and you'll find modernity as well: a train station like something out of Blade Runner, filled with immersive digital installations; a thriving contemporary art gallery scene; and, increasingly, a synergy of old and new that inspires creatives and global brands. Chanel presented its latest haute joaillerie collection, 'Reach for the Stars,' there on June 2. And Dior staged an elaborate pre-fall 2025 show in April in the garden of Tō-ji Temple. The lavish affair was inspired in part by former creative director Maria Grazia Chiuri's visit to Kyoto last fall. Her collection drew upon images of 15th- and 16th-century Japanese designs, and she worked with the traditional Japanese fabric company Tatsumura Textile Co. Kyoto is a city of temples, shrines, and gardens, where the annual cherry blossom season draws visitors from around the world and where it is still possible to see geishas promenading through the Gion district. You'll find modern Japanese shopping here, but plenty of traditional treasures, too. According to Toshiyuki Matsubayashi, master potter and 16th-generation leader of Asahiyaki, a revered pottery studio in Kyoto, what sets his city apart is that its history has not merely been preserved, but celebrated as an essential element of daily life. The interplay of the past with more contemporary domains of design, art, and hospitality is what helps his family-owned, 400-year-old business survive. His workshop now offers an exclusive behind-the-scenes tour to guests of the Park Hyatt Kyoto—an opening up of traditional methods perhaps unthinkable 100 years ago. Hotels are also experiencing a renaissance—which helps explain why luxury travel adviser network Virtuoso reports that its Kyoto bookings for 2024 spiked 115 percent over the prior year. (Visitors to Japan overall grew 47 percent from 2023 to 2024, and Japan was the most popular country on social media, per a study by Titan Travel.) Kyoto was long known for the ryokan—a type of traditional inn with paper walls, tatami floor mats, and communal onsen hot spring baths. That all changed with the 2020 arrival of the Ace Hotel Kyoto—a complete reimagining of the Kyoto Central Telephone Exchange building by star architects Kengo Kuma & Associates, with Los Angeles-based Commune Design doing the interiors. It's part of a wave of international hotel brand openings that is just now reaching full steam. The Six Senses Kyoto opened last year in the preserved historic district of Higashiyama, enhancing its impeccable five-star wellness concept with Japanese touches—its spa features an Alchemy Bar where guests can blend their own bespoke beauty scrubs with ingredients reflecting Japan's 24 sekki, or micro-seasons. Last year also marked the opening of the nearby Banyan Tree Higashiyama Kyoto, built to blend into the mountainous landscape surrounding the city, and the first hotel in Kyoto to have an in-house Noh stage. This fall brings the arrival of the glittering Capella Kyoto, designed by Kengo Kuma & Associates and Brewin Design Office, with a design informed by wabi-sabi aesthetics and Zen gardens. Perhaps most exciting of all, next year the Japanese hotel group Imperial Hotel, Ltd. will unveil the extensively restored and renovated Imperial Hotel, Kyoto, in the landmarked Yasaka Kaikan, a former theater where geishas and their maiko trainees once performed. The architectural firm Obayashi Corporation will oversee construction, while interior design will be done by New Material Research Laboratory Co., a Japanese design firm that specializes in the modern use of traditional Japanese construction methods and natural materials. Their brief for the new Imperial? Old is new. This story appears in the Summer 2025 issue of ELLE. GET THE LATEST ISSUE OF ELLE

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store