ShowBiz & Sports Lifestyle

Hot

“The Testaments ”stars and showrunner unpack surprise cameo on “Handmaid's Tale ”sequel premiere

“The Testaments ”stars and showrunner unpack surprise cameo on “Handmaid's Tale ”sequel premiere

Ryan ColemanWed, April 8, 2026 at 4:45 AM UTC

0

Elisabeth Moss in 'The Handmaid's Tale'Credit: Steve Wilkie/Disney

This article contains spoilers for The Testaments season 1, episodes 1-3.

Gilead is back. But not for long, if June Osborne has anything to say about it.

Elisabeth Moss makes a stunning surprise appearance at the end of the first episode of The Testaments, the sequel to the series that made her an Emmy winner, The Handmaid's Tale.

But that's not all — her inveterate freedom fighter June, who was nearly killed countless times plotting the demise of the series' central fascist republic, returns again for a thrilling two-hander with newcomer Lucy Halliday in episode 3, both of which debuted on Hulu on Wednesday.

Before the premiere, Halliday, her co-stars, Chase Infiniti, Ann Dowd, and Mabel Li, as well as The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments showrunner Bruce Miller, took Entertainment Weekly inside Moss' grand return to Gilead. That is, her return to the Handmaid's-verse, more hell-bent than ever on bringing Gilead down.

Elisabeth Moss on 'The Handmaid's Tale'Credit: George Kraychyk/Hulu

The long road to The Testaments began even before acclaimed Handmaid's Tale source author Margaret Atwood published her sequel novel of the same name in 2019. "She started to work on the book and I had these little hints," Miller recalls of which characters to keep alive... or not.

The Handmaid's Tale series was only in its third season, and June (spoiler alert for a seven-year-old novel) barely appears in Atwood's Testaments. Still, Miller cites "many factors involved" when ultimately getting his Testaments off the ground. The first he names — "whether Elisabeth Moss is available that week or not, decides whether she's in the show or not."

The Testaments switches focus from the abject degradation of the handmaids stratum of Gilead's repressive society, where misogyny is codified as law, to the rarefied echelon of the Commanders' daughters. These children of privilege, led by Infiniti's Agnes MacKenzie, haven't a clue what June's ilk endured four years before, where the events of The Handmaid's Tale ended in The Testaments' timeline.

But still, "having the journey of June felt — it could not end until certain things fell into place," Miller says. "That character really felt like she needed, still needs — she had work to do."

The Testaments tells the tale of Agnes' entwined fate with Daisy (Halliday), a rebellious young woman from Toronto who is spirited into Gilead as an agent of subversion after her parents are killed by republic operatives in a targeted bombing.

June, of course, does the spiriting.

Advertisement

Daisy's parents are eventually revealed as part of Mayday — the resistance network that June joins and ultimately leads significant portions of by the close of the Handmaid's Tale. June is briefly seen at the end of episode 1, lingering in Daisy's parents' shop before the bombing. After the fallout from their deaths in episode 3, she takes Daisy under her wing, making her essentially into a mini-June.

"Elisabeth Moss is the embodiment of The Handmaid's Tale. So getting to share the screen with her is a privilege. I was acutely aware of that," Halliday says with earnest conviction. "I think I just found myself watching her a lot. Like, I'd sit in silence between takes, just watching her, because she knows everything about this world.

Lucy Halliday on 'The Testaments'Credit: Disney

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.

"The more time I spent watching Elisabeth Moss, the more I realized just how important that feature of your work ethic actually is," she continues. "I'm realizing just how important it is as an actor to be fully prepared, and fully immersed in an environment and in a world and asking every question that you can ask. Because that's your duty in undertaking a role, to be as well-informed in portraying someone's life, and doing it to the best of your ability, and doing it justice."

Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday on 'The Testaments'Credit: Disney/Russ Martin

If anyone knows how Moss works on camera, it's Dowd. For six seasons she played the imperious Aunt Lydia, head of the Aunts, the only faction of women in Gilead with any power, and with no compunction against turning it on their fellow woman. And for six seasons June gave it right back to her.

June ultimately prevails, which Dowd describes in characteristically riveting fashion: "We see her at the end of The Handmaid's Tale on her knees in full remorse, begging for forgiveness. In other words, what June Osborne has done is crush her, and Lydia does not push back and say, 'No, uh-uh, you don't understand me.' She allows herself and the walls around her to crumble."

Ann Dowd with a statue of Aunt Lydia in 'The Testaments'Credit: Courtesy of Disney

Unfortunately for June, and honestly for Lydia too, they're built back up, fortified, and painted shades of blush and bashful in The Testaments. Unlike Lydia, however, Dowd absolutely beams when discussing her old sparring partner.

"Oh God, that was such terrific news," the actress says, reflecting on learning of Moss' return. "I love Elisabeth. She has been the heart and soul of The Handmaid's Tale, and when she came to be our director, that was so extraordinary. She was hands-down remarkable. So Lizzie has a very special place in my heart, and always will. Any chance to reunite with her is a beautiful one."

Lydia's new whipping post, her second-in-command at Agnes and Daisy's elite girls' school, is Mabel Li's vicious Aunt Vidala. Li reflects that "as someone who was a fan of The Handmaid's Tale, when I watched [The Testaments] for the first time and Lizzie turns around, I was like, 'Oh, God.' Her presence is so palpable. It's so powerful. And we know what it means when she shows up somewhere — that resistance is happening."

"Yes," Dowd says, knowingly. "Mayday is there."

The Testaments premieres new episodes Wednesdays on Hulu.

on Entertainment Weekly

Original Article on Source

Source: “AOL Entertainment”

We do not use cookies and do not collect personal data. Just news.