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Should Alexis Bledel Get an Emmy Nomination for Brief Handmaid's Tale Finale Cameo? Hulu's Submission Sparks Debate
Should Alexis Bledel Get an Emmy Nomination for Brief Handmaid's Tale Finale Cameo? Hulu's Submission Sparks Debate

Pink Villa

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Pink Villa

Should Alexis Bledel Get an Emmy Nomination for Brief Handmaid's Tale Finale Cameo? Hulu's Submission Sparks Debate

Hulu has officially submitted its Emmy entries for the final season of The Handmaid's Tale. One submission already raising attention is Alexis Bledel in the guest drama actress category for her appearance in the series finale, 610 - The Handmaid's Tale. However, this entry may face a rule issue. A new Emmy guideline disqualifies actors from guest categories if they have previously been nominated in lead or supporting roles for the same show. Alexis Bledel was nominated for supporting actress in 2018 after appearing in seven episodes that season. Hulu hopes the Television Academy will consider her case and possibly reclassify her submission to supporting drama actress before voting begins on June 12. The updated Emmy rules aim to clarify what counts as a guest role. According to the guideline, any actor previously nominated in lead or supporting roles for a show cannot be submitted as a guest, even if they appear briefly. This has already caused confusion. For example, Meryl Streep was ruled ineligible for guest consideration for Only Murders in the Building because of her previous nomination, even though she appeared in just four episodes. Paul Rudd, who plays a new character in the same series, was nearly eligible for the guest category but was in one episode too many. Many industry voices argue that the rules don't account for cases where an actor returns in a small role after a long absence. Some believe the backlash may lead to future updates to the Emmy rules. Hulu has made 36 Emmy submissions for The Handmaid's Tale, which ended its six-season run on May 26. The series has earned 76 nominations and 15 wins over the years, including the historic win for Outstanding Drama Series in its first season, the first for a streaming platform. Lead actress Elisabeth Moss has been submitted again and also for directing the second-to-last episode, Execution. Other acting submissions include Bradley Whitford, Max Minghella, and O-T Fagbenle for supporting actor. In the supporting actress race, Hulu submitted Yvonne Strahovski, Samira Wiley, and Ann Dowd. In addition to Bledel, Hulu submitted Cherry Jones (episode 602) and D'Arcy Carden (episode 608) in the guest drama actress category.

Elisabeth Moss Calls Taylor Swift an ‘Inspiration' After Handmaid's Tale Song Debut
Elisabeth Moss Calls Taylor Swift an ‘Inspiration' After Handmaid's Tale Song Debut

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Elisabeth Moss Calls Taylor Swift an ‘Inspiration' After Handmaid's Tale Song Debut

, the acclaimed star and executive producer of The Handmaid's Tale, recently expressed her admiration for after featuring the re-recorded version of 'Look What You Made Me Do' in the show's final season. Moss, a self-proclaimed Swiftie, revealed that Swift's music perfectly complemented a crucial moment in the dystopian drama. The track, taken from Reputation (Taylor's Version), played during Episode 9, 'Execution,' as Moss' character, June Osborne, led a rebellion against Gilead. In an interview with Billboard, Moss shared how Swift's song became the ideal choice for the intense and long-awaited scene. Moss admitted she had wanted to include Swift's music in The Handmaid's Tale for years but waited for the right moment. 'There could not be a more perfect song for a more perfect moment,' she said. 'Taylor has been such an inspiration to me personally. As a Swiftie myself, and I think I can speak for…our entire cast…who are all Swifties, it's such an honor to be able to use her music in the final episodes of our show.' As the director of Episode 9, Moss worked closely with editor Wendy Hallam Martin to integrate the track. She recalled telling Martin, 'I really want to find a place for a Taylor track in the last 2 episodes of the show,' and credited her editor for selecting 'Look What You Made Me Do.' Hallam Martin explained that Taylor Swift's powerful lyrics and defiant tone aligned seamlessly with June's storyline. 'Taylor was really the artist that delivered both lyrically and tonally,' she said. 'June, in this scene, really was saying, 'Look what you made me do,' and the song couldn't have been more on point.' The editor also noted how the track matched the scene's rhythm and intensity effortlessly. 'When I laid the song up against the scene, it just landed perfectly thematically, rhythmically, and magically hit all the edit points,' she added. Both Elisabeth Moss and Hallam Martin knew right away that this song was the perfect choice for the episode. The post Elisabeth Moss Calls Taylor Swift an 'Inspiration' After Handmaid's Tale Song Debut appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.

‘The Handmaid's Tale' star Bradley Whitford on Lawrence's ‘recklessness' and ‘insufficient redemption'
‘The Handmaid's Tale' star Bradley Whitford on Lawrence's ‘recklessness' and ‘insufficient redemption'

Yahoo

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘The Handmaid's Tale' star Bradley Whitford on Lawrence's ‘recklessness' and ‘insufficient redemption'

WARNING: The following story contains spoilers for the penultimate episode of , streaming now on Hulu. More from GoldDerby 'RuPaul's Drag Race' makeup head Natasha Marcelina has to be 'prepared for anything' How 'Bridgerton' makeup and hair designer Erika Ökvist turned Penelope in to a Hollywood siren for Season 3 F-bombs, SAG complaints: The 'Fortnite' AI Darth Vader controversy, briefly explained It's the end of Gilead as we knew it, and it feels GREAT. The penultimate episode of The Handmaid's Tale sees the revolution take place in full force, even if it doesn't go completely according to plan. June (Elisabeth Moss), Janine (Madeline Brewer), Moira (Samira Wiley), and Aunt Phoebe (D'Arcy Carden) — who is really a CIA agent named Ava working with Mark (Sam Jaeger) — start the episode excited for their next steps, but are stopped by Wharton's (Josh Charles) guards. He knows June is behind the 37 Commanders killed after his wedding, and he wants her separated from the others and sent to a prison cell. There, she tries to appeal to him, but ultimately fails and finds herself prepared to be hanged alongside her friends and even Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd). "We wanted, in the beginning of the episode, for the handmaids and June to enjoy at least a few minutes of exhilaration and freedom before she was captured. Gilead being Gilead, that window of joy doesn't last very long [but] as far as putting her in danger and then having her survive the episode, we always felt that a lot of the narrative plot — a lot of the story threads — would reach conclusion in the penultimate," co-showrunner Eric Tuchman, who wrote the episode, aptly titled "Execution," tells Gold Derby. Then, he adds, "the final episode becomes more of [the] original handmaid's emotional character-driven, reflective, introspective experience. The aftermath of her experience in [Episode 9] is what the finale is really about." In a penultimate episode of a show told from June's point of view, it seemed clear that she wouldn't actually die, but that didn't make the danger she faces in "Execution" any less heart-pounding and emotional, starting with what Tuchman calls the "summit meeting between June and Wharton, really representing the good and the bad guys." SEE The Handmaid's Tale star Ann Dowd: Aunt Lydia's 'blinders are open' as the revolution finally begins In a cold room taken up primarily by the cage June has been put in, the two face off for the first time, and she tries to appeal to his religious nature. "I have to credit Elisabeth Moss [who also directed the episode]," Tuchman says of the exchange between characters, "because the scene [originally] ended a little bit differently. It still had the same outcome: He still rejected her appeal, but Lizzie felt on the day that she needed to bring Serena back into it. She needed to bring the idea of Serena's God — that kind of loving God. So on the day, I rewrote a few of the last lines, and Lizzie was absolutely right, and she delivered them beautifully, and Josh responded in such an amazing way. "When she reaches out and touches his arm, it's so striking and startling to me because she has the audacity as a handmaid to touch the High Commander Wharton, and she leaves her hand there. I didn't expect it when she did it. I was waiting to see how Josh Charles responded to that physical gesture, and what he did was just astonishing and magnificent, the way he just slowly slid her hand off his arm, as if she was disgusting, and he did it without taking his eyes off her eyes," he continues. Nothing June tries in that moment works on Wharton — perhaps because he has already realized just how different Serena's vision for the future is from his own — but when she is on the stage, with her friends behind her, looking out at a sea of Gileadian citizens, mere seconds from being hanged, she asks Wharton if she can pray. And that reaches him, so he allows her to speak. She starts with a legitimate prayer, talking about how she has failed and been selfish and reckless and asking God to protect his "humble servants," before turning it into a war cry to all the members of Mayday in the crowd, screaming the now-infamous line, "Don't let the bastards grind you down." To Wharton and anyone else who buys into Gilead in full force, June's prayer sounds like she is atoning for failing to live the way the regime wanted her to. But everyone in Mayday — and the audience — can hear the deeper meaning: that she is apologizing to everyone she tried to save but couldn't and reminding all of the still-oppressed that their lives have meaning. "When I wrote it initially, I thought it was a manipulation — that she was playing the God card with this guy. She knew she needed to grab the attention of this crowd. How can she have an opportunity before she's [hanged] to finally inspire this crowd? It's her last few moments on Earth. She knew he wasn't going to give her the microphone willingly, and she's smart enough to know how to play this guy," Tuchman says of the prayer. "However, all that being said, when I watch that sequence now, I feel like June is genuinely contrite, and when she is apologizing for her failures to her friends and her family, it's 100 percent genuine." Although Wharton lets his guard down enough to grant her one final speech, when it turns into a call for the people to "rise up," the noose goes around her neck and she is swiftly pulled into the air, having to rely on Mayday to storm the guards and take out enough of them to get her down. Disney/Steve Wilkie They do, in a tightly choreographed sequence that gives Luke (O-T Fagbenle) his moment to be a hero and allows Rita (Amanda Brugel) to take out the guard working the crane, dropping June back down in the nick of time. Wharton may not be able to successfully execute the women he deemed "immoral, remorseless sinners," but the title of the episode still proves to be literal. After the failed attempt on the handmaids' lives turns into a very successful attack from Mayday, with an assist from the Army, the highest of the Commanders prepare to flee to DC. Mark realizes he needs a man on the inside and recruits Lawrence (Bradley Whitford) to load an explosive onto the plane. June brings Lawrence to the hangar early, but the other Commanders are eager to get out while they can and also arrive early, leaving Lawrence to have to smuggle the explosive onto the plane on his person and take off with them. Whitford tells Gold Derby that prior to starting work on the final season of The Handmaid's Tale he was "very anxious" because he "had this paranoia of, 'This show needs a big male obstacle,' and I was wondering which way this guy was going to go. "In my head, I've always had a very clear idea — a model for this guy — Robert McNamara, who was a guy who did a lot of damage in South Vietnam. He was a very bright guy whose brain obliterated his humanity, and he killed hundreds of thousands of people. And the fog of war is that you see there's humanity in there trying to peek out, and that was always my idea for this guy. I kept thinking, 'Why did this guy go, 'Who is that girl — that impossible handmaid?' To me, the whole arc of this was, 'Why did I go out on a limb for her so many times?'" Whitford says that in the early days of Lawrence paying attention to June, Lawrence was "drenched in condescending misogyny, casual misogyny," but over time the relationship strengthened and even started to mirror his real-life relationship with Moss, who he has known for more than 25 years, since their West Wing days. Getting on the plane is part "recklessness because [he] didn't care about [his] death," Whitford points out, and part "insufficient redemption" for a character that helped build Gilead but then came to fight for its reform. SEE D'Arcy Carden on her 'dream come true' joining The Handmaid's Tale and Phoebe's 'different Aunt energy' "One of the redemptive but still disappointing aspects of this character to me is it took the death of his wife for those consequences to hit home personally, which is always something that frustrates me about politics," he explains. Sacrificing himself to kill a plane full of the top Commanders may not have been in the original reform plan, but this is the chance Lawrence has to make a real difference in the future of Gilead. "I did want to make sure that we didn't see the actual explosion because it kind of cheapens it when that happens. First of all, it's a really difficult thing to make look good, and it just felt like it was going to be all about that then, and it's not about that; it's about what [June] is feeling in that moment," Moss tells Gold Derby. The emotions on June's face as she watches the plane explode in mid-air are extra heavy because it's not just Lawrence, who has been an ally to her, who she loses on the plane: It is also Nick (Max Minghella), who she has loved and who fathered her daughter. "It's a painful loss. It's something that we thought a lot about and we didn't take lightly. We didn't do it for shock value; we did it because we wanted to be honest about who these people were. Especially from June's point of view, she had to recognize that even if he's a wonderful person with her, there's no such thing as a wonderful person who's also a Nazi," Tuchman says. "Didn't she remember in Season 3 when the Swiss delegation wouldn't even talk to Nick because he's a war criminal and not to be trusted? Doesn't she remember when Serena said, 'Hasn't Nick told you what he did before Gilead came to power?' Didn't she remember in Season 1 when he didn't bat an eye when Emily was mutilated, and she said, 'Are you an eye' and he didn't deny it? ... When he stops at the top of that staircase before he gets on the plane, there's that choice that he's had before, but now if he gets on that plane, he's all in, there is no turning back, and he gets on the plane." As emotional as it is for June to watch Lawrence and Nick ascend the plane stairs, filming the interior plane scenes between the two men — one who knows he is doomed and one who may have felt conflicted about his choice but still thinks he is in a position of power — became just as highly charged. "It was a distracting night because it was Max and my last shot of this incredible experience together. Lizzie's directing, it's all emotionally loaded," Whitford recalls. "She basically just walked up and said, 'Let him be Lawrence here too.' It just opened it up for me. I think I was thinking exactly what I don't want to be thinking, which is, 'How should I play this?' And she was basically saying, 'Let me turn the camera on and watch the amoebas in your eyes and see what happens.'" In those moments, Whitford says, Lawrence does not feel he is redeemed — nor that he deserves to be. But the actor points out that the "amazing thing about" The Handmaid's Tale is its ability to "retain the possibility of redemption" for characters who bought into the Gilead system but come to see the error of their beliefs. "It's the dynamic of June blowing on the spark of decency and all of these different characters. It's a testament to the writing, to the original conception of June by Margaret Atwood, and to extraordinary acting, I would say particularly with Aunt Lydia and with Serena ... and I think it's where the hope is," he says. The series finale of The Handmaid's Tale drops Tuesday at midnight ET/PT on Hulu. Best of GoldDerby 'The Four Seasons' star Erika Henningsen on the 'biggest opportunity' she's ever been given and what might happen in Season 2 TV makeup and hair panel: 'Bridgerton,' 'RuPaul's Drag Race,' and 'The Wheel of Time' 'The Wheel of Time' makeup, hair, and prosthetics head Davina Lamont breaks down Rand's multiple looks in Rhuidean Click here to read the full article.

'Handmaid's Tale' Penultimate Just Aired, and Fans Can't Stop Saying This
'Handmaid's Tale' Penultimate Just Aired, and Fans Can't Stop Saying This

Newsweek

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Newsweek

'Handmaid's Tale' Penultimate Just Aired, and Fans Can't Stop Saying This

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. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors The end is almost here for the heroes and villains of Gilead and beyond. The penultimate episode "Execution" not only lives up to its name, but according to most fan reactions, it's one of the best and most powerful episodes of the series so far. Here's what happened and what the fans are saying. Read More: When Does the Finale Episode of The Handmaid's Tale Season 6 Come Out? Does Nick Die in 'The Handmaid's Tale'? Nick (Max Minghella) does not survive the events of "Execution" and it doesn't seem like a lot of fans are going to be shedding tears for June's former lover. Having chosen finally to side with Gilead, Nick boards a plane filled not only with the remaining commanders, but also carrying a bomb meant to kill them all. The plane explodes, all the commanders perish, and Nick dies along with them. Taylor Swift Re-Releases 'Reputation' in 'The Handmaid's Tale' Thrilling fans of both "The Handmaid's Tale" and Taylor Swift, "Execution" opens with "Look What You Made Me Do" as handmaids scatter into the dark of Gilead. What's particularly exciting is that this is a version of "Look What You Made Me Do" most fans couldn't possibly have heard yet. It's from the album "Reputation" which is the next of Swift's albums to be rereleased as "Taylor's Version". Other Spoilers in 'The Handmaid's Tale's Execution Episode Nick isn't the only main character to die in "Execution" but the other loss is much more tragic. Commander Lawrence (Bradley Whitford) knowingly sacrifices himself to take out the other commanders. The initial plan is for Lawrence to board the plane, plant the bomb, and then get out safely. But when the commanders arrive early, Lawrence is forced to either die along with the other commanders, or scrap the plan. He chooses the former. How Viewers are Reacting to Handmaid's Tale 'Execution' Episode Fans reacted strongly to the events of "Execution", including grieving the heroic loss of Bradley Whitford's Commander Lawrence. Though to say they simply grieved his loss isn't complete; they also celebrated his redemption. I have never been so completely shattered and satisfied to this extent in my entire life. Bravo Handmaid's Tale. Bravo. 👏🏽 #TheHandsmaidsTale — no one (@mehjee_850) May 20, 2025 Tonight's episode of The Handmaid's tale has me crying, screaming , throwing up on the floor. I knew Lawrence was gonna redeem himself some way I didn't expect this 😭😭 #thehandsmaidstale — Claudia _Morningstar (@wcake_wo) May 20, 2025 There were those who couldn't help but not only praise the heroism of some characters, but to throw the late Nick some final shade. The pure satisfaction of the Handmaid's Tale right now after all those years of bullshit—it's elite. Lydia, we've been waiting so long! And Serena, you did the right thing! Ava, you're new and I love you, CIA girl! But Lawrence, damn. Eleanor would be proud. And Nick, well… — Complain Factory (@ComplainFactory) May 20, 2025 Overall, it seems clear that the general consensus is that "Execution" succeeds as one of the most satisfying episodes of "The Handmaid's Tale" ever. Just finished episode 9 of The Handmaid's Tale and I was screaming, crying, shaking the ENTIRE time. Hands down the best episode of the entire series. I need a moment. #TheHandmaidsTale — Alice (@ArmoAlice) May 20, 2025 The Handmaid's Tale - Season 6 - Episode 9 - 'Execution'. Chef's kiss. — Manu Bergher (@manuelbergher) May 20, 2025 More TV: Taylor Swift's Rerelease of 'Reputation' Song Sends Internet Into Meltdown 'Andor' Creator Says Fan-Favorite Cameo Would Have Been 'Lame'

How fans reacted to the latest bombshell episode of Handmaid's Tale
How fans reacted to the latest bombshell episode of Handmaid's Tale

The Independent

time20-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

How fans reacted to the latest bombshell episode of Handmaid's Tale

The latest episode of The Handmaid's Tale, titled 'Execution,' featured the deaths of Commanders Nick Blaine and Joseph Lawrence, and a near-death experience for June Osborne. June and US representative Mark Tuello conspired with Commander Lawrence to bomb a plane full of commanders. Lawrence was unexpectedly forced to board the plane himself when the other commanders arrived early. Commander Blaine, despite his relationship with June, chose to remain loyal to Gilead and boarded the plane as well. The episode concluded with June witnessing the plane explode, killing both Lawrence and Nick. Fans reacted with a mix of shock and satisfaction on social media. Showrunner Eric Tuchman and actor Max Minghella (Commander Nick Blaine) discussed the significance of their characters ' deaths, while fans also expressed excitement for other storyline developments and the inclusion of Taylor Swift 's "Look What You Made Me Do (Taylor's Version)."

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