The titular cosmonaut training facility in Apple TV’s “Star City” is a hive of duplicity, all scrutinized by the KGB’s surveillance team and its small army of monitoring minions.
One of the main couples in Apple TV’s Soviet-centered spinoff of their flagship alt-history series, “For All Mankind,” is portrayed by Ruby Ashbourne Serkis and Adam Nagaitis, who are perfectly cast as Tanya and Valya Mironov. Valya is one of the Soviet Union’s primary cosmonauts whose Luna 16 command mission in Sept. of 1969 lands the first woman on the lunar surface, Anastasia Belikova (Alice Englert).
But the Mironovs have more than a few secrets of their own as they struggle to stay out of the way of Star City’s prying eyes and ears, monitoring every word and whisper. We connected with Serkis and Nagaitis to hear much more about the core of their connected characters, embracing the essence of late ‘60s and early ‘70s Soviet culture, and playing a married pair under the pressures of the communist regime.
“What I like most about Valya, without any spoilers, is that his internal world was fascinating to me,” Nagaitis tells Space. “He’s resilient and dedicated, and he’s specific and reliable, and those things are useful for an actor because it gives you a focal point, which is always a good thing.”
For Serkis (and yes, she is the daughter of “The Lord of the Rings” star Andy Serkis), there’s a certain measure of love and sympathy for Tanya that provides an emotional cushion.
“I have a real soft spot for her, and I feel really sorry for her,” she reveals. “I think she’s someone who craves freedom and expression and connectivity, and her life at Star City is slightly devoid of that. So she has to seek out what she can in order to make it happen for herself
“I like her place in the show”, continues Serkis. “I don’t think I have the mental capacity to play a scientist. I’ve always seen her as representative of the Soviet wife and the dreams and hopes and ambitions that young women have growing up that would have been dashed and sacrificed with a husband. I like that she’s solid and she’s humanity, and I love that they include her amidst all the space.
“I think it’s a really interesting environment to delve into. Ultimately, it’s a culture of survival. As terrible and harrowing as things were, people just had to get on with it. And that was something that was useful to try and click into.”
Stepping into the skin of a daring cosmonaut raised under that harsh, oppressive environment required more than a little thought as to how that would feel for Nagaitis’s conflicted spacefaring character.
“I read a lot about the Soviet Union, and it’s easy to just attach to some Orwellian idea and say, ‘okay all my rights and freedoms have been impinged and now what do I do,'” he explains. “That’s a completely useless thing for me because now I’m a dissident. Now I’m feeling things Valya didn’t feel. Valya grew up in this situation. All of his childhood memories are about the Soviet Union, which is what ‘Secondhand Time’ is about, that book we were all so fond of.”
The book in question, Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets, is an oral history of the Soviet Union and its ultimate end, which became required reading for many of the cast. “It became an important mast for us to remember how deep the double-think and double-speak goes,” notes Nagaitis.
“When I think of loving a country — which to me is a bizarre and slightly absurd notion — I can love memories of a way of life, I suppose. I can love stories that people have told me about things. So how did Valya love that? What were Valya’s stories of love that he holds in his memory and that he associates with people? Because everything is people. A country is nothing if it isn’t people.”
“Star City” season 1 is streaming now exclusively on Apple TV, with new episodes dropping every Friday.


