Killing Eve season 3 premieres 2 weeks early

Sandra Oh stars as Eve Polastri, an American working in British Intelligence in BBC America's Killing Eve.
Sandra Oh stars as Eve Polastri, an American working in British Intelligence in BBC America's Killing Eve.

LONDON — Sandra Oh scrabbled through the heaped-up trash in a dumpster, then suddenly let out a piercing scream.

"Wow, excellent," said her fellow actor Turlough Convery as the filming stopped.

Killing Eve

7 p.m. Sundays

BBC America

It was a gray, damp day in mid-December, and Oh and Convery were on the set of the BBC America espionage drama Killing Eve outside a shabby, institutional office building in East London. They were shooting Season 3, and the moment seemed to capture some essence of what Oh has always brought to her role as Eve Polastri — a quirky and passionate MI6 agent "whose instincts and resolve have to make up for her inexperience," as Mike Hale wrote in The New York Times, "and her tendency to scream like a terrified child in the face of danger."

But this time, Oh hadn't been acting. "That was genuine," she said, her expression panicked. "Something moved in there!"

Oh's surprising, idiosyncratic performance, as well as that of her Emmy-winning co-star, Jodie Comer — pretty as a picture as assassin Villanelle, and far more volatile — were two reasons Killing Eve surged in popularity after a relatively modest, if critically heralded, debut in 2018. Another was its creator, Phoebe Waller-Bridge Fleabag), whose razor-sharp adaptation of the novellas of Luke Jennings was a genre mashup of mordant comedy and tense thriller, infused with the whisper of dark, unspoken desires. By the end of that first season, the series had doubled its audience, going on to win a Golden Globe. Season 2 built on those feats under a new lead writer, Emerald Fennell, earning the series an Emmy and multiple BAFTA awards, the British version of the Emmys.

Killing Eve returned April 12 — two weeks earlier than originally scheduled. Once again, it returns with a new lead writer (the British equivalent of a showrunner), this time Suzanne Heathcote, a playwright and screenwriter best known for her work on Fear the Walking Dead. Once again, its producers are gambling with an already winning formula.

Across the first two seasons, that mix sustained a plot that was harrowing, gruesome and hilarious in turn. In Season 1, Eve, an American working in British intelligence, has her life upended by her growing obsession with the terrifying but seductive Villanelle, who leaves a trail of bodies wherever she goes. In Season 2 (spoilers ahead), the two become unlikely collaborators in pursuit of a megalomaniacal tech billionaire. It ends as a thwarted Villanelle shoots Eve and leaves her for dead — a neat parallel with the end of Season 1 when Eve stabbed Villanelle.

Season 3 picks up after Eve has survived the shooting, has left MI6 and is working in the kitchen of a Korean restaurant, trying to keep her head down and her thoughts away from the past. But the past won't go away — not for Eve, and not for Villanelle, who is uncomfortably reminded of her younger self by the appearance of her former Russian trainer.

Nor will it rest for Carolyn (Fiona Shaw), the steely MI6 operative who again draws Eve into an investigative web.

"There has been a considerable evolution in Eve's character," Oh said in a makeshift dressing room inside the appropriated East London office building. "At the start of Season 1 you had a person with a wonderful naïveté about the world and her place in it. By Season 3 she is aware of the darker parts of herself, but she also has a certain weight, an understanding of life that she was craving at the beginning."

Heathcote's emphasis on the characters' psychology doesn't come at the expense of the thriller elements that have infused the series with horror and high jinks — part of the template set by Waller-Bridge, which the creative team says it has worked hard to preserve. "What Phoebe managed to do in the very first script is to take away that spy-genre trope where people are very serious and talk in a rather urgent way," said Damon Thomas, who has directed episodes of each season and is an executive producer of the show. "She made everyone very real and brought out the absurdity of real life, and both Emerald and Suzanne have continued that."

Killing Eve is often described as female-centric, but it also has important male characters, like Villanelle's handler Konstantin (Kim Bodnia); Eve's husband, Niko (Owen McDonnell); and Carolyn's son, Kenny (Sean Delaney). Shaw, who plays Eve's boss, Carolyn, said that while she didn't think the preponderance of major female characters and writers made any difference in the day-to-day experience of working on the show, she did appreciate the opportunities given to female writers.

"There is no doubt that some of the humor is spun from female minds, but it's not the female equivalent of male humor, it's just good," Shaw said by phone. "All humor has to have jeopardy in it, and maybe that's what women haven't been allowed. It's dangerous, it's sexy, but it's not crude, even if it's miles from Jane Austen."

Weekend on 04/30/2020

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