Bruce Miller leads âHandmaidâs Taleâ into new territory in Season 2
The cliffhanger that closes out Margaret Atwoodâs 1985 feminist dystopia novel, âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â has mystified Bruce Miller, the showrunner behind Huluâs television adaption, ever since he read the book in college not long after the bookâs release.
Set in Gilead, a near-future America in which theocratic extremists have taken control, Atwoodâs main narrative concludes as June/Offred, the storyâs rebellious handmaid heroine, is whisked away in a van by soldiers for what appears to be her role in the resistance.
Juneâs destination and future are unknown â all she has to pin her hopes on are the reassuring words of her secret lover, the driver of her âCommander.â
The first season of the series ended on the same suspenseful note.
So, what happens next? Will June escape Gilead? Or has her confidant been conspiring against her all along â leading June to her punishment?
Fans of the book and series will see what Miller, whose imagination was boosted with the aid of a team of writers and Atwoodâs input, has come up with when the Emmy-winning drama returns for its second season Wednesday with two new episodes. (Subsequent installments will be released each week).
âIt really came from what would really happen,â Miller, 53, says over lunch on a recent day in Beverly Hills. âThat was our go-to all the time.â
The new installments pick up right where Season 1 left off, with a pregnant Juneâs destination revealed. Now moving past the narrative of the book, the next 13 episodes delve deeper into the dystopian setting â viewers will learn more about the historical events that led to the creation of Gilead and get a glimpse of the not-previously shown Colonies, the badlands outside Gilead where prisoners, known as unwomen, essentially go to die.
But a central theme of the season is motherhood, and the complications that arise when bearing a child in this world.
âWhen I describe Season 2, I usually say, âItâs a ticking time bomb,ââ Miller says. âItâs âIâm pregnant â and what does that mean?â In Gilead, it is, âHow am I going to bring this kid into this world? Also, itâs kind of protecting me, but not forever.â Just the idea of Gilead is all about babies. What happens when you get a baby?â
When I describe Season 2, I usually say, âItâs a ticking time bomb.'
â Bruce Miller, showrunner of Hulu's "The Handmaid's Tale."
Careful not to spill anything on his blue suit jacket while seated at a restaurant inside the hotel where heâs doing press for the show, Miller is in that period before a wave comes barreling in. In a few hours, the first two episodes will premiere at the TCL Chinese Theatre, and in less than a week, they will be up on Hulu.
There are a lot of expectations riding on the new episode. Thereâs inherent pressure that follows a successful show in its second season â all the greater for âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ as it extends the story past the novel.
Far from anxious, Miller is eager: âThatâs the nicest part, to have people finally watch,â he says. âBecause weâve been sitting with it for so long.â
Not everyone would be so calm. âThe Handmaidâs Tale,â which is produced by MGM Television, makes its return after a blockbuster debut. Headlined by Elisabeth Moss (âMad Men,â âTop of the Lakeâ), the drama instantly earned acclaim among viewers and critics for its deft depiction of women stripped of their rights and sparked countless think pieces about the current political and culture climate. It went on to win a heap of accolades, including five Emmy Awards â most notably for outstanding drama series, making Hulu the first streaming service to win in the category.
The hoopla made Miller, who won an Emmy for his writing on the series, one of TVâs most powerful showrunners. And, yes, youâd be right in noting the paradox of a man helming an adaptation of a womanâs story about the oppression of women, and itâs not lost on him.
Long interested in adapting the novel, Miller watched as attempts to translate it for TV fell through â including at Showtime with Ilene Chaiken (âThe L Word,â âEmpireâ) set to write. When MGM started discussions to bring it to Hulu, the goal was to find a woman to lead its charge.
âThey were looking for a female showrunner, wisely,â Miller says. âAnd I was completely on their side. I waited patiently. If they had succeeded, I would have tried to get on the show in any capacity. When I finally went in and talked to them, I talked about the show that I thought we should make and they were excited by it. I had 30 years to think about it.â
Atwood, referencing the first two scripts Miller submitted, was pleased with his vision for the series and the way he sought to enhance the book.
âWe had a few earlier gos with other people,â she says in a telephone interview. âBruceâs was very strong, very cinematic. It got us right into the story. And it seemed to be respecting the parameters of the book⌠Iâve worked in film and television in the â70s quite a bit. And I worked with men a lot, because it mostly was men. Theyâre individuals. So some of them I worked very well with, and others not so well with. And Bruce is an individual who I can work well with.â
Moss, who is also a producer, was impressed too.
âBruce understands this material,â the actress, who won an Emmy for her portrayal of Offred/June, wrote in an email. âAnd heâs also man enough to know that there are things he will never understand by not being a woman. He relies heavily on his female writers and producers, myself included, to provide that unique voice⌠Telling this story from a feminist and female point of view is probably more important to him than anyone. Hence why heâs the human for the job. Weâll forgive him for being born a man. Nobodyâs perfect.â
âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ has placed Miller in the top ranks of TV producers following an unspectacular, though steady, resume.
Bruce is an individual who I can work well with.
â Margaret Atwood, the author of "The Handmaid's Tale"
Originally from Stamford, Conn., Miller developed an interest in writing while in high school. As a person with dyslexia, he felt drawn to the challenge of trying to figure out how to get a story from his head onto the page when getting anything on a page felt Herculean. Motivated by the works of Stephen King, John Irving and Kurt Vonnegut, heâd take fiction writing classes at Brown University, which was where he first read âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
âThere was a semester where I didnât take a writing class and I was like, edgy,â Miller recalls with a chuckle. âI realized, âShoot, now Iâve got to keep doing this.â â
Two weeks after graduation, Miller moved out to Studio City, where he lived with five people in a cramped apartment, and pursued a career in writing movie features while working at a local bookstore. Not long after realizing his movie work was failing to make an impression, he turned his attention to television.
After working on a number of TV movies and the little-seen cable series âHigher Ground,â starring Hayden Christensen (âStar Wars: Episode II â Attack of the Clonesâ), Miller scored his most high-profile credit in 2002 when he joined the writing staff of NBCâs âERâ during the showâs ninth season.
It was a dream come true for Miller, a fan of the series. But he acknowledges he faced a steep learning curve in settling into a well-oiled machine with a sprawling cast.
âI stunk when I got there,â Miller says. âI wasnât good yet. I wasnât good at producing. I wasnât good at writing. But I learned a ton.â
He wasnât asked to return after his two-year deal was up. But he credits the show for teaching him how to write for television.
âHe came in during a particularly tough time on the series â we were in the midst of changes to our central cast,â says âERâ executive producer John Wells by phone. âThere was a lot of pressure from the network about what we were doing. One of the many things thatâs wonderful about Bruceâs writing is he takes a novelistic approach, heâs very character-driven. When âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ took off, I couldnât have been more pleased for a human being.â
Miller is direct about his career: Though he worked on several shows, including âEverwood,â âMediumâ and âMen in Trees,â the stints wouldnât last long. He blames his inability to figure out how to make himself useful on a show.
He finally found his footing on Syfyâs âEureka,â a show about a small town sheriff in a town of scientific wonders â eventually becoming co-showrunner. Heâd run other shows â âAlphasâ and âThe 100â â before landing his bucket list gig with âThe Handmaidâs Tale.â
Charlie Craig, who was the showrunner who hired Miller onto âEurekaâ and would work with him again on âThe 100,â praised Millerâs big-picture outlook. He referenced a mini-retreat they took to examine what had worked, and hadnât worked, on the show.
âHeâs someone that likes to take a step back before talking about where the story should go,â Craig says by phone.
Miller, who still calls Studio City home and is married with three children, says he learned about the kind of showrunner he wanted (and didnât want) to be in that period, emphasizing the importance of listening â particularly now as he oversees a majority-female writing staff on a show about what it means to be a woman whose rights are taken.
âI did realize at some point that my listening skills werenât too good â that instead of listening, I was just waiting for my turn to talk,â Miller says. âAs a showrunner, you canât do that because you shut everybody out. Our writers room [on âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ] has to be honest. Not only for people willing to share things, but also feel safe when other people are asking questions respectfully and out of genuine curiosity that you need to know for the show.â
The result is an unflinching examination of a patriarchal nightmare and the growing resistance to it-- a portrayal that has drawn comparisons to the current momentum of the #MeToo movement.
âI wish it wasnât relevant at all,â Miller says.
Blessed be the wish.
Twitter: @villarrealy
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