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Aubrey Plaza just saw the Sopranos finale for the first time, and she’s beside herself. “I’m shook,” she says, having somehow avoided Tony Soprano discourse for 16 years. She coordinated her viewings with her actor friend Jake Johnson, and they’ve been texting about the ambiguous blackout ending ever since: “Yesterday I was like, ’Oh my God, what do you think happened?’ And he was like, ‘I don’t know but I was crying,’ and I was like, ‘I was crying too.’” Plaza knows how odd all this sounds. “I was like, ‘This is ridiculous, that we’re going through Sopranos finale stuff.’”

Aubrey Plaza on the cover of Awards Insider wearing Miu Miu.
Aubrey Plaza’s dress, bra and briefs byMiu Miu; jewelry byRepossi.Photograph by Dan Jackson; Styled by Katelyn Gray.

Plaza finally feasted on the series that birthed prestige television while making the second season of another obsession-inducing show, The White Lotus. She was starring alongside Michael Imperioli, who played the tragic Christopher Moltisanti on The Sopranos, and figured if she had plot questions, she could just ask him. When I ask Plaza why she’d never watched the show before—not judging, just curious—she says she doesn’t really have any streaming subscriptions and hasn’t seen her season of The White Lotus either. I offer to give her my HBO password, but she vehemently declines. She hates apps and can never figure out how to make streaming actually stream.

“I get really angry,” she says. She’s laughing but dead serious. “I was trying to watch Top Chef season 20. Couldn’t figure out how to fucking get Hulu + Live. I give up! I can’t. I just can’t. And so what I like to do is go on iTunes and buy movies that are old. Or I’ll go on iTunes and just, like, buy the whole Sopranos series, and then my husband will be like, ‘You literally can watch that for free on HBO Max.’”

If you’ve seen anything that Plaza’s ever been in, you know that her energy is beguiling and unlike anyone else’s. “She’s funny, bold, and extremely intelligent,” says Adam Driver, who stars with her in Francis Ford Coppola’s upcoming movie, Megalopolis. “My first impression was that she was on the run from the police.”

In case you still need to hear it, Plaza is not April Ludgate. She started playing network television’s funniest, most acerbic intern on Parks and Recreation when she was 24 and embodied it so thoroughly that the role shadowed her for years. Audiences assumed that April and Plaza were interchangeable: the disaffection, the disdain, the dark-sidedness. But the person sitting before me in a clean-food restaurant outside Atlanta with a rather massive Americano is a sharp, grown-ass woman, thinking about an afternoon yoga class and a 5:30 a.m. call time the next morning. Plaza seems a little shy, but she carries herself with purpose. “The deadpan thing wasn’t, like, my thing. I could do it, but it wasn’t like, ‘There goes the deadpan girl.’ I like to think that I’m such a good actor that people just thought that was literally me,” she says, deadpan.

April was an avatar for millennial jadedness and skepticism. At times Plaza still plays into the image, as at the SAG Awards this year, when she and Wednesday’s Jenna Ortega did a witchy bit—which Plaza cowrote—about hexing the ceremony’s producers. The persona, she says, is a defense mechanism, particularly when it comes to late-night show appearances. “You can see all the colors of my psychological state on display in any of these interviews,” she says. “It’s a struggle for me every time. It’s a struggle to not quote-unquote ‘give people what they want,’ which is—I don’t even know what they want—and try to have fun for myself without coming off like an asshole. I think it all just stems from—I’m scared. I prefer to be a character. I mean, that’s literally what I am doing.”

Sixteen years from now, when Plaza gets around to watching season two of The White Lotus, she’ll see that she delivers a nuanced, powerhouse performance as Harper, a tightly wound, justice-minded attorney who is, relatably, annoyed by her vapid vacation companions.

I offer Plaza my unsolicited opinion on the character—that I wish she had dumped her husband, Ethan (Will Sharpe), who got to be a newly rich tech bro while Harper had to suffer through his boyish insecurity. She hears me out, intrigued, or at least faking it credibly. “There was a slight dynamic shift, I think, when we started shooting,” she says. “In the script, it felt like they both were on the same level of boredom or complacency. But I don’t know if it was Ethan’s, you know, rock-hard abs—the 16-pack that he somehow magically had while we were shooting—but I was like, ‘No, no, no, no, no. The dynamic is different now.’”

Series creator Mike White wrote the role specifically for Plaza. “There’s something about Harper that feels like we tapped into a kind of vulnerability people wouldn’t expect from me,” Plaza says. “There’s an element of feeling misunderstood, and I gravitate towards those kinds of characters a lot—their defenses are up and they feel out of place.”

While making The White Lotus, Plaza thought about her childhood and her parents’ own ascension through the class system: Her mother is an attorney, like Harper, and her father works in wealth management. “They’re not in that billionaire world at all,” she says, “but the idea of coming from nothing and, you know, working your way up—I think that’s why the character felt very personal to me. I grew up navigating different worlds and different communities where I was like, Oh, now all of a sudden we’re living in a bigger house and a more fancy neighborhood.’ But I always felt like an outsider.”

Plaza’s dad is Puerto Rican and her mom is Scottish and Irish. They had her when they were 19, and their home in Wilmington, Delaware, was a cultural consortium. Plaza remembers coming back from Irish dance class—“You can’t move your arms!” she laughs—and then salsa dancing in the kitchen.

Her mother, Bernadette, was a beauty pageant contestant when Plaza was a kid. “Hair out to here, blue eyeshadow, super ’80s babe,” Plaza says. “I feel very much like there’s some kind of ancestral, generational thing going on, just in my DNA. There are a lot of people in my family that are just so creative. It makes me wanna cry. And I got lucky. I have the means to somehow do it. It feels like a weight, almost. Not a bad weight, but like it was meant to be or something. I make so many of them so proud, and it feels personal, because they all had a hand in raising me.”

As the eldest of the grandkids on her Puerto Rican side, Plaza wound up assuming a lot of responsibility. “Nothing fazes me, I’m very malleable,” she says. “I grew up around a lot of people pulling me in different directions, but there was an overarching theme of family on both sides. Doesn’t matter who fucked up or what’s going on. So many crazy things were always happening, but we all have each other’s back at all times. And you know where you came from.”

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