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Sepideh Moafi Talks ‘The Pitt’ Toxic Fandom and Noah Wyle Feud Rumors
The internet can be a strange place.
Toxic fandom is real, and social media will run with the most unfounded rumor when fans love (or hate) the trajectory of a showās central character. One of those rumors has been circling since Season 2 of āThe Pitt,ā the HBO Max medical drama that returned in January, with unsubstantiated claims that star and executive producer Noah Wyle had a behind-the-scenes feud with the newest cast member, Sepideh Moafi, who plays Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi, the attending physician who arrives as Dr. Robbyās interim replacement ahead of his sabbatical. The fan-fiction theory held that Dr. Al-Hashimiās arc was a form of retribution for the supposed off-screen rift.
Speaking with Variety on Zoom from her apartment in New York City, Moafi shuts it down without hesitation.
āAbsolutely not,ā she says. āI do not have that power. Weāre really great colleagues. Noah and I have always had a great working relationship, which is why it actually felt safe to do the darker, dirtier work in episode 15, particularly because, between setups, we were shooting the shit and laughing. So thatās completely false that thereās a personal sort of beef or rivalry between us, at least not that Iām aware of. You can check with Noah, but I donāt know about this.ā
Nonetheless, the point matters because Moafi is coming back for more emergency room chaos, confirming she will return for Season 3, which is currently being written and slated to begin filming later this summer. However, how much sheāll be featured or how large her arc will be is still up in the air.
āAt the moment, I am. Iām not sure to what capacity,ā she says, before laughing. āIām positive, I think? Nothing is clear to me as to whatās happening with the story, how many episodes, all that, but I am coming back.ā
That news lands at the front end of whatās shaping up to be Moafiās breakout year. āThe Pittā has been one of the undisputed hits, coming off winning five Emmys for Season 1 including outstanding drama series, along with trophies for Wyle in lead actor, Katherine LaNasa in supporting actress, guest actor for Shawn Hatosy and casting. The sophomore outing is walking into the current TV awards season as the frontrunner, heavily agreed upon by pundits. A win would make it only the fifth drama to take the top Emmy for both of its inaugural seasons, following āHill Street Blues,ā āPicket Fences,ā āThe West Wingā and āMad Men.ā If nominated in the supporting actress category, Moafi would become the first Persian actress and the first Middle Eastern performer overall recognized in the category.

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Asked what that recognition would mean, one name comes to mind: Toni Morrison.
āAs Toni Morrison says, this is not a grab bag candy game,ā Moafi says. āItās not about me, and I get this, and look at how great I am. For me, itās so much about showing what the next generation, showing what with girls in Iran, showing girls in Afghanistan, showing girls in the U.S., like we are visible, we are here, weāre unstoppable, and weāre fucking good.ā
She continues: āWe want the visibility that we exist, that weāre here, that we are the DNA of, in this case, the United States. What it means to be American is to look like me, and to look like you, and itās not a monolith.ā
Moafi was born in West Germany in a refugee camp after her parents fled Iran following the Islamic Revolution, and immigrated to the United States as a young child. The Iranian American actress has long brought a quiet ferocity to her work, in series including David Simonās āThe Deuce.ā Still, Dr. Al-Hashimi is the role that putting her in the awards conversation.
The characterās storyline cracks open in the back half of Season 2. Itās revealed that Dr. Al-Hashimi has lived with a chronic seizure disorder ā focal impaired awareness seizures ā since contracting viral meningitis at age 5. During high-pressure shifts, her seizures present subtly: she suddenly āzones out,ā stops speaking or stares blankly, behaviors most colleagues had read as her being thoughtful or deep in concentration. In the Season 2 finale, she confides her medical history to Dr. Robby. She shows him her charts after he has begun piecing together whatās happening. Robby presses her to officially disclose her condition to the hospital. She reveals she already has a medical plan in place.
That arc, Moafi says, is the one she most wanted to fight for.
āPeople with disabilities, people with health conditions, are not disposable, and letās just be clear about that,ā she shares. āThey are not fucking disposable, and the idea of you did this, and so now youāre gone is outrageous and cruel.ā

Sepideh Moafi
Richard Knapp
Moafi has been the stoic, mesmerizing counterweight to Wyleās reactive Dr. Robby all season, most notably in scenes where Robby appears to shame Dr. Mohan for having a panic attack. That stillness comes from somewhere. Moafi originally trained as an opera singer, and her mother cried when she told her she was switching from music to acting.
āShe started crying, and sheās like, āNo, but your voice,’ā Moafi recalls. āBut she also said, āYou canāt take your shirt off.’ā
She has always marched to the beat of her own drum. Moafi says she was bullied relentlessly in grade school, but that didnāt stop her from doing things people assumed she wasnāt capable of, like joining the junior high wrestling team.
āI went and I tried out for wrestling, and I remember the coach was like, āYou know, volleyballās in the other gym,ā and I said, āI know.ā And heās like, āOK, OK,’ā she says. āI made it co-ed because I was the only girl on the team.ā
She has also become an unexpected internet favorite. One meme circulating on social media positions Dr. Al-Hashimiās curly hair as the medical-drama answer to Jennifer Anistonās Rachel Green on āFriends,ā nodding to the ā90s sitcom hair phenomenon. Moafi is ecstatic about the comparison.
āOh my God, I did not see that. Iām obsessed, and Iām so honored, because growing up watching āFriends,ā the Rachel Green hair was everything,ā she says. āHow many people throughout my career, when I wear my hair curly, have said, āOh my God, youāve inspired me to wear my hair curly.ā Itās crazy to me that we have any shame or hesitation, because weāve been told that this is what beauty looks like.ā
Up next, Moafi will star opposite āA Separationā actor Shahab Hosseini in a Farsi-language Iranian film āWild Berries,ā which was announced in May 2023. āI am such a Shahab Hosseini fan,ā Moafi shares. āItās an Iranian film with an Iranian filmmaker.ā
The screenplay, written and directed by Soudabeh Moradian (āPolaris,ā āDoomsday Machineā), is adapted from āLanguage of Wild Berries,ā written by the playwright Naghmeh Samini (āMainline,ā āThree Womenā).
But the political moment weighs on her. With war raging in Iran and an Emmy nomination potentially within reach, Moafi describes feeling something close to survivorās guilt. She answers it with seven words of her motherās wisdom.
āDonāt ask why, just say thank you.ā