One element of community that stayed strong for Mia is her working-class Jewish network, something De Swarte was keen to use from her own life in the show. “I wanted to show an example of Jews that you don't normally see in this way: working-class Jews. black and brown Jews.” Did she have any sense of a change of landscape as antisemitism started to rise in the year between making and releasing the show against the Israel-Gaza conflict? “I'd written it obviously before things had got to where they are now,” she says. “But regardless, it still doesn't change my...