The Handmaid’s Tale‘s Elisabeth Moss has selected a new project: The indie Call Jane, about women seeking safe abortions in the 1960s.

From Mad Men to The Handmaid’s Tale and again to Top of the Lake: China Girl, Elisabeth Moss knows how to pick conversation-starting, female-centric projects.

Fresh off The Handmaid’s Tale sweeping the 2017 Emmy Awards, Variety has learned that Moss (who herself picked up a Best Actress statuette) will be starring in a feature film exploring the 1960s women’s right movement called the Jane Collective.

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Directed by My Week With Marilyn‘s Simon Curtis and written by Hayley Schore and Roshan Sethie, Call Jane is set in 1960s Chicago pre-Roe v Wade, and follows an underground network of women who secretly provide safe abortions.

Moss plays the titular Jane, a married woman who falls pregnant and seeks the movement’s help.

Abortion is still a hot topic in contemporary U.S., and with the on-going GOP efforts to cut funding to Planned Parenthood, a story about the importance of women having access to safe, legal abortion options feels more prevalent than ever. It is also, incidentally, a topic that aligns closely with the topics central to The Handmaid’s Tale.