The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott - S2E4: Woe's Hollow (with Theodore Shapiro)
Episode Date: February 7, 2025For Season 2 Episode 4, Ben and Adam are joined by Severance’s Emmy-winning composer, Theodore Shapiro — or, Teddy Shaps, as his friends call him. He pulls back the curtain on his long-standing co...llaboration with Ben Stiller, going all the way back to 2004’s Dodgeball; the four chords that unlocked Severance’s ear-worm of a main theme; and the world of Kier folk tunes he discovered while scoring this episode. Then, Ben and Adam talk about filming this monumental episode where the Outties go out-f***ing-side. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hey, I'm Ben Stiller.
I'm Adam Scott.
And this is the Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam, where we break down every episode of Severance.
And today we're talking about the fourth episode of Season 2,
Woe's Hollow, written by Anna O. Young Munch and directed by Ben Stiller.
Yeah, this is a big one for us.
And the other exciting thing is that we're going to be joined by
Severance's marvelous composer, Theodore Shapiro.
Yes.
Then, Ben and I are going to talk about some scenes from the episode.
And of course, the prophetic Zach Cherry will be back to tell us what he thinks will happen
in the next episode.
That's right.
Zach doesn't watch anything.
We don't even know if he reads the scripts when he's,
you know, except for his lines.
He just feels what he thinks is going to happen.
Yeah, yeah.
He's like an octopus.
An, oh, like an octopus in what way?
Well, he's, an octopi tends to intellectualize
each one of their arms.
I have no idea what I'm talking about.
Does this have to do with like my octopus teacher?
Yes, which I didn't see.
Okay.
Yeah, and you're saying an octopi,
but an octopi, octopi is a plural.
That means several, yeah.
I was-
Oh, you're saying octopi use, they sense things?
I'm just assuming that that movie is about
a psychic octopus, and I don't assuming that that movie is about a psychic octopus
and I don't think that's what it's about.
It is not.
Be warned, there are spoilers for episode four here.
So learn from my recap pod listening mistakes
and be sure to watch the episode first
and then listen to us.
Yeah, definitely.
Cause there's definitely a big, big spoiler
in this episode.
Good Lord, yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So how have you been, Ben?
I'm great.
Yeah.
I'm great.
I'm still buzzing from the experience of the Grand Central Station severance pop-up that
happened when we're recording this yesterday.
That was just so much fun.
It was incredible.
It really felt like we were taking a step back
and bringing things down to sort of a basic performance level
and it was like a happening.
It was like a happening, yeah, like a fluxes sort of thing,
if you know about that history
of experimental performance art.
The idea was to have a cube in the middle
of Grand Central Station that had the cubicle
with you guys sitting there doing your severance stuff.
And you guys, originally it was a great idea
that Apple had and originally it was just gonna be actors
that they hired to kind of like look like office workers
at the cubicle.
And then you said, we should do it.
The actors should really do it.
Yeah.
You said, I'll do that.
Yeah.
And I just figured the cast would be game.
And lo and behold, everybody was super into it.
It was incredible.
It was incredible.
And you guys just went in there for three hours.
Yeah.
And you refined and you interacted.
I vacuumed the floor.
Well, you did that, the little roller thing,
which you do in episode two, I think.
Not a real vacuum.
And I'm not convinced it does anything,
but just move dust particles around.
Then Ms. Cobell came in and you got in trouble
with her at one point.
Many times.
She got upset, she threw a coffee cup.
I was talking to my wife and daughter on the outside
when the coffee cup got thrown and I was like,
whoa, what just happened?
What just happened?
It was amazing though,
cause nobody could hear you guys on the inside
and people were literally enthralled.
It was mesmerizing.
Yeah.
When Milchik came in with the red ball, I didn't even know what he was doing with the red ball,
but he didn't look happy.
No.
And at a certain point, Patricia got under the desk.
Yeah.
What was going on there?
Well, a couple of the monitors went out,
and so Patricia took it upon herself to try and fix them.
And then once she'd started fiddling with the plugs,
all of the monitors went out.
That's so Patricia. It really is. That's true. And then once she'd started fiddling with the plugs, all of the monitors went out.
That's so Patricia.
I know.
It really is.
That's true.
But when Tramell walked out,
because you had to kind of walk through the crowd
to get to the cube, the whole place got really quiet.
Yeah, and then like there were cheers too.
Oh, oh, for sure.
I think when he came back the second time,
and when Patricia came in, it was so great.
It was just, you know, people discovered it,
nobody announced it and it was just.
Yeah, we just walked in
and there was no announcement or anything.
And people just sort of started stumbling upon it
and being like, wait a second,
those are the actors from the show.
And we just improvised for three hours,
but there was a certain freedom to it
cause no one could hear us.
Yeah.
So we could just do whatever we wanted.
And we kind of decided that it fell somewhere
around season one, episode three,
just the culture of MDR felt like it fell somewhere
in that area.
Yeah, I could not have been more excited
or happy watching it.
And it just was so much fun.
It was a blast.
And it was fun to also talk, for me on the outside,
I was like taking pictures.
I got to talk to fans of the show.
It wasn't just people who were going home from work.
There were people who saw it on Reddit or on social media
and came down who were fans of the show.
They made the trip.
Yeah, well, they saw it, they came up on their feet and they ran over and it was great.
I talked to people from Brazil,
I talked to people from Ireland, from England.
It was just great to talk to fans of the show
and see how excited they were about the second season
and you don't get a chance really to interact.
I guess when you guys went down to Brazil
for the Comic-Con down there, you got a chance really to interact. I guess when you guys went down to Brazil for the Comic Con down there,
you got a chance to meet people.
We did and people are so excited for season two,
which is really flattering and so much fun,
but this had its own sort of organic feeling to it
because like you said, there was no announcement.
It was just something.
And I'm glad we did it for a few hours
because people,
like you said, were able to kind of make the trip
and we were still there by the time they got there.
Yeah, we wanted it to go on for long enough
that people could discover it
and you guys would still be there.
And you guys were troopers and amazing and so much fun.
So that was great.
Well, all right.
Our guest.
This is exciting. Is one of Severance's secret
weapons, though he's not really that secret because he won an Emmy for the show. Yeah.
I feel like we're the secret weapons. We're the secret weapons. These guys. Pass the Emmy.
Theodore Shapiro. Teddy Schaafs, as his friends call him. Teddy, how are you, man? I'm good.
How are you guys? Great.
Yeah, we're good.
We're good.
So great having you here.
And by the way, Adam and I are in person together in New York
here right now, which is fun.
Yeah.
We can high five multiple times if we needed to.
Yeah, you've done it already so many times.
That's right.
So Teddy, you and I go back a while.
Do you remember?
Do you remember when we first met?
We first met, you called me to try to get me,
successfully try to get me to work on dodgeball.
That's so funny, cause I was asking you that question
like I knew the answer
and I don't remember when we first met.
So now, I mean, I know dodgeball
was the first thing we worked on.
And I'm wondering, do you remember what you had done?
Sure, yeah. So I had just done,
Along Came Polly and Starsky and Hutch.
Oh, okay.
And I think you'd seen.
Maybe that's where you guys both knew each other.
Yeah, I wasn't involved with either of those movies
in any way other than just showing up on the set.
But I did.
But that must be the connection.
Yeah, no, I didn't.
I mean, you know, Todd Phillips directed
Starsky and Hutch and the great John Hamburg,
who's a mutual friend of ours,
wrote and directed along, came Polly.
And yeah, those scores were great.
And you came, and Ross and Thurber,
who's directing Dodgeball,
I guess I must've suggested that, you know,
let's talk to Teddy.
You were probably Theodore to us back then
before we knew you. Hey, can I ask you something? Can I ask you something, let's talk to Teddy. You were probably Theodore to us back then
before we knew you.
Hey, can I ask you something?
Can I ask you something?
Yeah, yeah, sure.
It is Shapiro, right?
It is Shapiro.
I've always wondered that, you know,
some people pronounce Shapiro, Shapiro.
Yeah, what is it?
I mean, I think that Shapiro is the correct pronunciation.
And I think that Shapiro must be just some weird Ellis Island, you know,
decision that one of my forefathers made.
Really? Really? Okay.
I mean, I'm not the only Shapiro. There are others out there, but I don't think it's grounded
in anything authentic. I think it's, it must be some Americanization.
So it's not like an affectation that you put on it when you came to Hollywood
I was not like trying to make it sounds like you may be
Well, you know, he's like a fancy composer and maybe he's like, you know, I don't know it is quite fancy
I was not trying to impress anybody with Shapiro
I'm impressed with it and I get to impress people when they say like,
oh, I really like Theodore Shapiro's work.
I'm like, it's Shapiro.
Excuse me.
It's Shapiro for those in the know.
So Teddy, you and I know each other completely separate
from all of this because our sons, Julian and Graham,
have been in school together since kindergarten.
Yes.
And I was thinking about the fact
that the first time I ever heard about this show
was at a Halloween party where you and I
were accompanying our sons and talking about
what's going on.
And you told me about this show.
And I was like, oh man, that sounds really good.
I hope Ben calls me.
Also, you know, the first time that I ever met you
was at our kid's preschool in Pasadena.
So I remember everyone like, oh, that's Adam Scott.
I remember just being like,
holy shit, Ben Stiller's here, holy shit, holy shit.
So Teddy, then we went on to do a few movies together.
Yeah, you did Tropic Fender together and Walter Mitty.
So you guys have worked together quite a bit.
Yeah. We have. Is there a. So you guys have worked together quite a bit. Yeah.
Is there a particular process you guys fall into together?
Is each project sort of a fresh start or?
What do you think Teddy?
I mean, I think that each project has actually
been a little different from the last.
We've developed a little bit more of a process over time.
And in particular, I think what I would say is that with MIDI,
and then with this,
the big difference is just me starting to write earlier in the process,
and having the music exist during Ben's creative process earlier,
which I think helped in both cases, which helped
the music sort of evolve as like an integral part of the project.
Yeah, I remember having some pieces that you had written on set from the very
beginning when we started shooting season one, you had some kind of sketches
of themes for us to play on set. It was really important to have that.
Yeah. Well, we were lucky on
Severance because when we had this delay due to COVID,
I think that was around the time you were able to write a lot of music.
Well, yeah. I mean, it's interesting.
I think that we found our main theme during the COVID break.
I actually have this fond theme during the COVID break.
I actually, I like, I have this kind of fond memory
during the summer of COVID in 2020,
we had like just discovered the main theme
and I was up in Oregon, like drove to Oregon.
Can I just interrupt you when you say
we had just discovered the main theme,
what that means is Teddy wrote the main theme.
Yeah.
Actually wrote three different,
didn't you send me like three different options?
Wow.
Well, I said, so actually I had started writing
a bunch of themes and sending them to you
and you were excited about what I was coming up with.
And then in February of 2020, I flew to New York and we met up at the set
and you were like listening to the music and there was just like this one little part that
you kept coming back to. And it was just like, it was the B section of something that I'd written.
It wasn't like the main part of it, but you kept coming back to that thing. And I was like, oh,
part of it, but you kept coming back to that thing. And I was like, oh, first of all,
always follow Ben's instincts.
That's like the cardinal rule.
And like, there's something that Ben is responding to here.
And in that thing that we were listening to,
it was kind of like an electronic piece.
And then when I got back to LA,
like I went home and I sat down at the piano
and I played the four chords from that B section
at the piano and it was like,
oh, what if it was this?
So wait, when you say it was an electronic piece,
do you mean it was, what do you mean?
Like it was that same melody but-
It wasn't the melody, it was just like the four chords.
["The Four Chords"]
But all of the sounds were like more overtly electronic.
Okay.
But when I played it at the piano, suddenly like the tone of it changed completely and
it became more of this mystery.
And I was like, oh wait, maybe this is the whole thing.
We had been talking about like, what if there's one sound for the innies and one sound for
the outies and like the any world is electronic and the Audi world is organic and
but when I played that thing I was like oh wait a minute what if the whole show is just like a
puzzle like this would be the music if the whole show was just one kind of puzzle.
Yeah.
So I sent that off to Ben and I was pretty excited about it and did not hear back from Ben for like three weeks.
And so I was like, oh man, that's a bummer.
He didn't like it.
And I sort of thought that I was onto something.
And then like one day, like the phone rang
and he was like, oh, I love this thing.
Like, this is great.
I'm really into this.
You're like, where the hell have you been for three years?
Was it just sitting in your inbox for three weeks?
No, I had listened to it immediately
and I just didn't want Teddy to feel too good about,
like that he was smart.
Smart, thank you.
No, I don't.
I think I must've gotten preoccupied or something,
or I was doing other stuff.
And there's also something else unique I think I must have gotten preoccupied or something, or I was doing other stuff.
And there's also something else unique
about this particular theme in that it's not just providing
kind of this emotional through line for the series
and sort of tying things together.
It's also really catchy in its own right,
which instrumental themes often are not.
Often they're there as sort of background.
But this is a really kind of earwormy,
really beautiful song.
And to think that you were kind of sectioning it off
as sort of a minor part of another theme
is really interesting.
And Ben, it kind of obviously stood out to Ben,
but you were, was it like a bridge to something else?
It wasn't a bridge to something else,
but it was just sort of the middle,
it was like, here's my main idea.
Okay, I'm gonna do something here
and then I'm gonna come back to my main idea.
And what's interesting about that is that sometimes
when you're not being precious about something,
you'll just do something that is simple and memorable,
thinking that you're just kind of tossing it off.
Yeah, yeah.
And the more complicated thing is gonna be the main.
Exactly.
And yeah, I mean, it was just,
it was funny because I had these four chords
and the fourth chord kind of demanded that I write this like sort of a weird melodic idea and that's where, you know, da da da da da.
Yeah.
You know, it was the thing that fit with the weird fourth chord and-
The fourth chord often does that, doesn't it?
That's the thing.
Yeah, right. I have no idea what I'm talking about.
I was just gonna say, what are you talking about?
What's amazing to me, Teddy, is like,
you can't emphasize enough how important
Teddy's music is for the show.
I think, you know, just, I am such a fan of yours
and I really don't understand how you do what you do,
you know, in terms of the creative process,
because you have so many constrictions in terms of what you're having to create,
to have something like to score a scene and to time that it can take and how much,
and the notes that you get,
the feedback of if it's right for the scene or not,
and also just like where it comes from and the instrumentation and all these things.
I'm just amazed at your process
because you also are incredibly fast
in terms of how you do the work
and it kind of spoils you for any other process
because Teddy will turn things around so quickly.
But it's really, for me, any movie we've worked on together
it makes me wanna be in this world,
to live in this world that the music creates that, you know, inspires me visually and just, you know, in terms of
the tone of the piece. And so we were really lucky that you were willing to write this
music ahead of time when we started shooting season one, so that when we were shooting
and on set, we could actually play it during some scenes. And when we were trying to find the tone of the show,
and so we play it in MDR or something,
and it would just sort of change the whole feeling.
Walking down the hallways and stuff,
you would play it, and it did really help.
Yeah, there's so much music in the show.
There's so much music in this show.
Yeah, and I agree, it's so integral to the show and the feeling in the show. Yeah, and I agree. It's so integral to the show and the feeling in the show.
And I actually feel like your music has saved me
on a number of occasions in scenes.
Teddy, you're a filmmaker.
And what I mean by that is like, you just,
you know movies so well and you've worked on a lot of movies.
And I feel like that's another part of our relationship
and our collaboration for me is, you know,
the way that you work with Jeff, our editor,
you guys have developed an amazing relationship.
But you know, when an episode comes in,
you know, you get the rough cut of the episode.
I, there's always like a little something inside me
to like, I hear from Teddy, like, did you like it?
Did you not?
And it's not because, it's not because I just want you to like it's because I really
value your opinion as a filmmaker and I feel like that's a big part of what you do.
You know the way that we work on this show where I feel like I'm talking you know Jeff and I do we
have this very close relationship and I feel like I'm in constant conversation with Jeff,
and then it's always understood
that you are in conversation with Jeff,
and so I feel like the three of us are just sort of making
the show in post together in a really interactive
and creative way, and, you know, it's not always like that
with every project.
Like, sometimes you're brought in at the end, and, you know,'s not always like that with every project like sometimes you're brought in
at the end and you know the film's already edited and you know they just sort of want you to put
your music on top of it and you just and and sometimes that's just the way that their process
worked right but it's just such a joy to do it this way and to sort of have the music live
in the show from the beginning like this and and? And you've written so much music for the show
and you wrote so much music ahead of time.
But then when we get to the editorial process
with a specific episode,
we'll lay in music that you've written ahead of time,
but then there'll always be that sort of crafting of like,
oh no, this actually needs a new cue
or this needs a new idea here.
And that's a big part.
And that goes to episode four,
you know, episode 204,
where obviously the story is in a whole new environment
and that required you to come up with a new theme,
just a completely new theme.
And I think you did that ahead of time too,
the same way you did it for season one,
but for this specific episode, right?
Well, I mean, that was one of the first things
that you ever told me about season two
was about this episode.
And so I feel like from the time that I started
writing themes for season two,
I was really focused on this episode in particular
and finding sounds.
But truthfully, like Ben, I should say that the thing with 204 was that this was the episode
where I feel like we worked the hardest to find the tone of anything in both seasons.
And a lot of those things that I did in advance ended up being part of the episode.
But there was, you know, we were working at it for a while.
And what was it about this episode
that was a bit tricky for you guys
and to zero in on that particular tone?
Well, this is, you know, the episode where they go,
it's like the Lumens version of a corporate retreat,
but it's in freezing wasteland where, you know,
it's called an Orkbow where Milchik
is putting them out in the elements.
And I always wanted the episode to be very visual
and to be not a lot of dialogue,
at least the way it ended up in the first part
of the episode has very little dialogue
and to be stark and kind of other worldly.
So yeah, that was the idea behind it.
And just from the very beginning of the episode,
where we find Irving on the lake,
and then he, you know, hears Mark's voice
and follows his voice and he meets Heli on the way up,
and they end up on top of this cliff,
overlooking this big lake,
and there's this monitor there with a message from Milchik.
You know, it just was surreal.
We wanted it to be surreal and eerie and weird.
Actually, you know what?
Why don't we take a listen to the Milchik video music
that you wrote.
Yeah, like the retro.
Yeah.
Yeah. That is the actually the theme that you wrote.
Patricia sings in season one.
That's right.
Exactly.
The cure him.
The cure him.
But the Musac version.
Yeah.
And I remember Ben, you just kept saying like, can you make it shittier? That's exactly right. But the Musak version. Yeah. And I remember, Ben, you just kept saying,
can you make it shittier?
That's exactly right.
You kept on coming back.
I was like, this has to sound more like really bad Musak.
Yeah.
Yeah, it sounds almost like a grade below Musak
you would actually hear it.
It is a grade below Musak.
That's right.
Yes.
It's some guy quickly doing something for this video.
Exactly. All right, it's time for us to something for this video. Exactly.
All right, it's time for us to take a quick break. We'll be right back.
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slash s-e-v-e-r-a-n-c-e. So Teddy, the theme that you ended up with for the episode was also sort of mirrored in the Theramin tune, right?
Yes. Yes, well that was a real breakthrough. I mean, you know, it's interesting because like I remember I sent you two versions of
Miss Wong's theremin music.
And one was just kind of like spooky theremin sounds like not real, you know, not really
a tune.
And then the other one was this tune that was it was sort of like a cousin to the Keir Hymns.
You were like, that's what we wanna move towards.
Like you've, you had your finger on it and-
Yeah, that's our, that's our collaboration.
Teddy writes something brilliant and I go, that's great.
So wait a second, wait a second.
So the Theremin music that Sarah Bach is playing,
that Ms. Wong is playing is that same Kier Hymn?
Cause I didn't even recognize it as.
No, no, no, it's not.
But what it unlocked for me was, oh yeah,
there's this whole body of Kier music.
It's like Kier folk tunes.
Right.
And when I wrote that and Ben responded to it,
I was like, oh right, there's like,
there's a world of Kyr folk music.
Like it sits next to the Kyr hymn.
Exactly.
Yeah, yeah.
Exactly.
Now, had you played a theremin before?
Have you had a lot of experience with one?
So I'm going to admit that, no, I don't play a theremin,
but I have this instrument called an ond martino
that's like an early electronic instrument
that sounds like a theremin.
And I'm not very good at playing it.
It's a little harder than it looks to do it well.
Is it a keyboard instrument? So it's a little harder than it looks to do it well. Is it a keyboard instrument?
So it's a keyboard instrument, but it has this wire that you kind of slide from right to left
along the keyboard. And so like, if you slide it up to a C, then it'll play a C.
With your left hand, you press one button that says how loud or soft it is. And then with your right hand, you do the pitch with this, your fingers in a little,
is a little ring and you move it up and down and that determines the pitch.
Sounds super easy.
Sounds like you're making it up as you go along, actually.
Yeah.
I don't believe you.
Yeah.
And it sounds like a theremin, essentially.
It sounds like a theremin. So, and because I'm not that good at it, I was, it sounds like a theremin, essentially. It sounds like a theremin.
And because I'm not that good at it,
it was like, it seemed like it would work
for Ms. Hwang on the theremin.
So yeah, so that's how I did it.
I mean, the theremin is a fascinating instrument.
And we could talk for hours about what a theremin is.
Basically using the force to make music.
I don't even understand how it works.
When you watch Ms. H Wong play it in the episode,
she's doing it, right?
What is she doing?
So a theremin is like the only instrument
where you don't physically touch anything.
Right.
You're using your hand to block, I think, a wave,
and that is creating the sound.
It's wild. Incredible.
I know, it's totally crazy.
And you know what else is amazing
is that Sarah Bach learned how to play the theremin
for the episode.
Yeah, I know.
You can tell she knows what she's doing.
It looks perfect.
Incredible.
I mean, I was convinced.
Yeah, this young woman is just,
she's such a good actress and so smart and so committed and she went and learned how to play it.
That's one of, uh, I think the more interesting scenes
in the episode and you then, I remember, scored
as Milchik's tail gets darker and weirder,
you went on to score it with the theremin
to get even weirder and stranger as it gets, you know...
Exactly. Exactly.
Yeah, let's take a listen to that scene.
And he reached up to grasp at his hair,
which was suddenly moss that tore easily
from his bleeding scalp.
Good heavens.
And as the pus from his eye thickened into sap,
I turned from my gargling brother
and walked to the pool of the hollow,
where I knew the waterfall would drown out my brother's cries.
That's actually really smart.
And it was here that I first encountered the tempera woe,
a gaunt bride, half the height of a natural woman.
I just have to say the theme that you did come up with, that theme which she's playing
on the theremin, to me that spooky, weird, kind of evocative melody
is, it's so, it makes this episode in my mind,
because it puts you in this world,
which again, I just can't say enough
how much the music is important in our show.
It's part of the world of the show.
We're so lucky to have Teddy.
Yeah, man.
Thank you.
I mean, I have to say that there was a particular moment
in the show where I thought to myself,
this might be the single best piece of footage
that I've ever gotten to work on,
which is during the sex scene between Mark and Helly, that shot with the red glow.
The wide shot.
The wide shot?
Of the red glow of the two of them,
where you just kind of see almost
their weird animal silhouette.
Yeah, the wide shot is just sort of like
at the end of it, right?
Yes, yes, yes, exactly.
And the cue that you did there is,
it's so funny, because we've never talked about this,
that it's like one of my favorite,
did I tell you this?
That moment, that cue.
No, I think Jeff told me that you said that,
that you were like,
because I wrote a chord at the end of that,
that I really was happy about,
and the director doesn't always love the thing
that you write that you're really excited about,
but in this case, I've heard Jeff that Ben's like,
that chord is my favorite moment of the whole show.
And then what you're doing too, Adam, is good.
Yeah, yeah, it's fine.
Whatever.
All right, well, we've been asking fans
to call in with questions.
We have this hotline set up.
So we got one about the music
that we want you to help us to answer, okay? Okay. Let's listen. Hey guys this is Don calling from New York. I'm a
big fan of your work. My question was what was the influence behind the Praise
Cures anthem that was sang to the crew at the end of season one? I was just
wondering what went behind that whole composition and where, what
the backstory was with that.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, Don.
Uh, so he's, he's asking about the Keir Hymn.
Yeah.
What I remember was at a certain point, I think that IFA-
IFA McCardell who directed the episode.
IFA McCardell, yes. You know, she had identified,
well, the Keir Hymn was written into the script,
the lyrics, and I think that Ifa gave me a reference
of something that she felt would be an interesting reference,
and it was this lullaby that was in the movie,
Night of the Hunter.
And so I listened to that and I sat down at the piano
and played and sang the Kira hymn sort of as a lullaby.
And then, you know, and then Patricia performed it
as a punishment.
Yeah, it's so interesting because Patricia,
the way Patricia interprets it is ominous.
And like you said, it's a punishment,
but the melody and hearing it now in this episode
and hearing it kind of travel in different versions,
it is sort of lulling and you can see it as being
kind of like this soothing song that's kind of
gone through the ages.
Yeah, exactly. And you actually hear that theme in the scene where Cobell is in front
of her shrine to Cure in, is it 105 or 106?
Yeah.
And that's the score. So it has this sort of devotional quality there and then-
Devotional, yes. that's the word.
Yeah. Anyway, I'm just so happy that we got to work together.
Yeah. I know. It's great. And Adam, you're so great on this show. And I'm so amazed by everything
that you're doing. Thanks, Teddy.
Well, thanks, man. Thanks for joining us. Yeah, thanks, Teddy.
All right. Yeah. Thanks, guys.
Well, thanks, man. Thanks for joining us.
Yeah, thanks, Teddy.
All right. Yeah. Thanks, entire episode is with innies,
but it's out fucking side, which is my favorite line.
I think from the season is Dylan's first line
when he emerges.
He knew there was no ceiling, but this is insane.
Yeah, but this is insane.
I don't know whatever he said.
So we're all outside because it's part of a Lumen reform
called the ORTBO, which stands for Outdoor Retreat
and Team Building Occurrence.
Let's listen to Milchik telling the innies about it
on a DVD.
Good morning, refiners.
This is Mr. Milchik from work,
and I'm thrilled to welcome you to your first ever
Outdoor Retreat and Team Building Occurrence. work and I'm thrilled to welcome you to your first ever outdoor retreat and team building
occurrence he is this or is in response to your desire to see perfect the outside world
mr. milchick from with your outies blessings you will spend the next two calendar days
walking the meadows thickets brambles and brooks that make up the Dieter Egan National Forest
Who the fuck is Dieter Egan?
Dieter Egan
Some of you may be quietly yearning to learn more
The truth you seek lies within the fourth appendix
Wow seek lies within the fourth appendix. Wow.
So, okay, this episode is a complete departure
from the Innis world,
but also the world of the series entirely.
Do you want to just talk about where it came from
and why you wanted to do this?
Yeah, I think it was one of the original ideas
for season two was we knew we wanted to do
a corporate retreat of some type.
Yeah.
And what would that be?
So it was really, you know, trying to figure out
what the reason would be for that, which felt
like it really made sense in terms of Milchik
trying to maybe do something.
I think it's probably a good question that,
I don't know if there is one answer for it or not
in terms of what his motivation is for it.
I think on the one hand,
you see that there's some element of compassion
that he has for the innies,
but this retreat is not really a fun experience for them.
It's meant to, I think, on another level,
like kind of basically say,
okay, you guys wanted to go see the outside world.
Yeah, here you go.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's not so easy and it's not so nice.
Yeah, yeah.
And you know, how it's organized,
what he's doing, the okays that he has from his superiors
and all that we don't really know about.
But it was an opportunity just to, you know,
really dig into
the weird mind games that Lumen plays with the Innies.
And we talk about sometimes the choices that you guys have to make in terms of like,
what's the first thing I'm experiencing?
Like, oh, I'm buttoning my shirt for the first time.
I've never done that before.
And it's not always appropriate to do that in an episode,
but this was an opportunity for you guys to really take in the outside world
in a way you'd never done before.
And just as a production, you know,
to go off and make this episode was,
it was like we were making a little movie.
It really was.
And, you know, watching the episode again last night,
I was like realizing just how expansive it is.
And we were out there,
we were out there in the elements for what, five weeks?
Yeah, I mean, we talked about
how we were gonna make this episode.
We, you know, we're not the kind of show
that does that kind of visual effects stuff
where we do something, you know, with green screen
or something like that.
So we knew we wanted to go to a real location.
At first, we started thinking about, you know,
we knew snow was really important.
And of course, like in our world with climate change
and finding snow is a really hard thing to do,
even in the winter.
You can't depend on any location
at any particular point in the year.
Right, and we're based in New York with the production
and it's hard to go very far away.
We talked at one point about maybe going to Colorado or going to Canada.
And we realized that was wasn't really feasible for us.
But the Catskills were close by.
We shoot a lot of our exteriors in upstate New York in a town called Kingston.
And this was a little bit further west and out there more.
But we have a great location manager named Ryan Smith.
Yeah.
And Ryan went out and started searching around and we found this,
the biggest centerpiece for the episode is the waterfall.
Yes.
Keir's twin was always with him.
That's why we provided the very same for each of you.
Fuck you all, I was right. Mr. Milchek.
This is the tallest waterfall on the planet. You have followed the path of Kier and Deeder
and reached Woes Hollow. You stand upon sacred earth.
We're starving, Mr. Milchak.
Are you?
I thought the waterfall's grandeur would satiate you.
I'm teasing, of course.
So finding this waterfall was sort of the key,
and Ryan found Awasting Falls,
which is near Lake Minnewaska
and Lake Minnewaska was where that lake is.
And.
But that was the other part of it too, is the
frozen lake, the cliff above it.
I mean.
Yeah.
Well, this was also like, it was written
originally that you guys were in a clearing.
That's right.
And then all of a sudden they hear you and
they're like, you kind of come out of the woods or something.
Right.
And you know, we thought this is something we could
really find something that's a little bit more
traumatic and we found this lake that has this cliff
over it.
And we thought, well, wouldn't it be cool if
Mark is standing up on top of the cliff and Irving
is in the middle of the lake.
Yeah.
Which we really, I was really up on that cliff. He was out in the middle of the lake. Yeah, which we really, I was really up on that cliff.
He was out in the middle of the frozen lake
and we were actually screaming to each other.
Yeah, yeah.
That was fun to do.
Look, the whole episode was so dependent on weather too.
We got so lucky.
I remember it was touch and go for a while
and then right before our shooting dates,
right before moving up there, there was a big storm am I right?
Yes there was a storm that like for the four weeks that we were shooting
basically we needed snow and a storm happened and it only happened like at
the altitude the snow was at the altitude that we were shooting at.
But everybody kind of moved up to the Catskills for a while and were staying
in hotels around there.
We were based in Accord.
We had a really fun roller skating rap party.
That was really fun.
At a place called Skate Time in Accord, New York.
Do you know Bjorn Korn, the popcorn?
That's where I discovered it and I eat it to this day.
So that skate rink is owned by Bjorn of Bjorn Korn and Stephanie.
I love Bjorn Korn.
Yeah, and they hosted us.
And we had, I mean, we had a really good time.
There were, I mean, it was a huge production
in terms of like, you know, having to get up
to where the campsite was, was, you know,
you had to take these like snow cats or, you know,
other like kind of vehicles to get up there,
especially when the weather hit.
Oh yeah, I mean, just for the actors to get to set.
And this means that everything else was 18 times more difficult.
Just for the actors, we would drive from where we were staying for a while and
then arrive at the base of the mountain, get out of the car and get onto a snow
cat because there were no actual roads going up to where we were shooting.
Ride in the snow cat up to the top of the mountain where we had our base camp,
which is just a series of tents with heaters in them.
And that is where we were all day and we would go venture off and shoot from there,
sometimes needing to hike for 45 minutes or something to get to where we were shooting.
The cave, the cave.
The cave, yeah.
Scissor cave was a real hike.
There was no way to reach that little cave
except to hike at least, yeah, it was like about 30 minutes.
But our camera crew had to literally carry
those heavy cameras and camera cases.
It was an ordeal.
It was an ordeal.
And the weather was constantly changing
when we were filming the episode two.
And the other big centerpiece of the episode
is Irving's dream.
The cliff where we find you in the beginning
and where you have the scene with Milchik
and then you see the shadow off on the cliff,
the sort of faceless version of you,
that was at a place called Sam's Point
and in this Peterskill area,
which was a little bit away from Lake Minnewaska.
This is the Shawangunk Mountains.
Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful place.
Really, really gorgeous.
And we had to shoot that dream sequence.
Basically we had to switch our schedule around
because one morning we came into work
and it was really foggy and snow had fallen. and it was really foggy
and snow had fallen and it was so foggy
that if we had shot that scene of you guys
on the cliff with the TV,
you wouldn't have seen any of that vista.
So Jessica, our cinematographer made the call to say like,
let's go shoot the dream.
And so we went over to this sort of burned out forest area
that was at altitude that was near that cliff.
And it was foggy and eerie.
And what you see when Irving walks to the cubicle
in the middle, we brought the cubicle out to the middle
of this charred out forest.
And that's not a set, that's not visual effects.
That's all real, real fog.
That was extraordinary because I wasn't there,
but you told me about it when you guys got back
and looking at the dailies,
it looks like it was designed
and it looks like special effects.
Like you never could have asked for better fog placement
for better colors.
I mean, it is beautiful
and it was all naturally occurring.
Yeah, we were so lucky.
We were just so lucky with the elements
and the ability that we had as a crew
to like kind of like change our plan
and just go do that made all the difference.
And then we shot in this sort of this blueberry field
where you guys were walking through
where Irving's reading
from the Keir book, the fourth appendix.
And it was difficult to walk because we had these boots, we need to talk about the wardrobe,
but we had these boots that also had crampons attached to them that were made for walking
on slippery ice.
They're basically like almost like straight claws that lift you an extra like five inches off the ground.
But walking through deep snow and or blueberry bushes
made lifting our feet up and down exhausting
and we were all drenched in sweat
by the time we made it across those fields.
I mean, Sarah Edwards, our costume designer
just did incredible work where that was the other thing
we knew all we were gonna have
were you guys out there and the snow.
So what are the costumes gonna be?
What would they put, what would Lumen put you in?
And I think Dan had this idea that it would be something
that would feel like it was from like a hundred years ago.
And she came up with just the most beautiful costumes,
these black coats, these black fur hats.
And everything down to the undergarments were period,
were from a particular time.
Yeah.
It felt like Revenant era.
And it was just really, you know,
that choice was really important
because we knew we were gonna sort of live with that
for the whole episode.
Yeah, and also the color of the wardrobe that everyone had.
It's particularly beautiful and particularly stark
when up against the snow.
It's really, really just incredible to look at
these four figures moving across the landscape.
Yeah, and I remember we shot tests of you guys in that
and I remember Milchik's outfit, which is white and kind of.
Yep, and Ms. Wong as well.
Yeah, Ms. Wong too and there's some,
there's like a Jeremiah Johnson vibe going on there.
They look like they're in the Empire Strikes Back
and we look like we're in Jeremiah Johnson.
Right, yeah.
All right, let's take a break and we'll come back
and talk a little bit more about some of the plot stuff that's going on in this episode.
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So a lot of different things going on
in this episode, the big thing of course,
is that since episode one, Irving has been suspicious
that Heli is not telling the truth
about what went on with her
when she had her Audi activated.
Yeah, something about it just hasn't sat right with him
since that first episode when they all got back.
So you guys are trudging through the snow
and he's suspicious and he's asking about
the Nightgardener comment.
Yeah, he's sort of starting to pick apart
Helly's story a little bit.
And to Mark, it just kind of is out of the blue
and feels ridiculous.
Like, what are you even talking about?
Yeah, and I think that's also probably
because Mark is so into Helly at this point too,
and not maybe wanted to see that.
And thinking about Irving and Irving being the one
who started to pick up on something strange about Helly,
I wonder if because he's so heartbroken
and he's so sort of emotionally raw and split open,
if he's extra sensitive to the vibrations
of everyone in the group or something,
because he, from the very start, sees something very wrong
but can't quite put his finger on it.
That's right.
And you even see that in episode three a little bit too,
when you guys go out to look for the goat people.
Yeah, she stops and comforts him a little bit too when you guys go out to look for the goat people.
Yeah, she stops and comforts him
and takes liberties that just feel a little off.
Yeah, and then you're trudging through the snow,
you discovered the dead seal.
By the way, a moment in time when real snow came down
from the heavens just for like three hours,
while we shot that scene in three hours,
all of that scene because we knew the snow was going away.
Just real quick, I remember when we were shooting this
with John and I and him asking me about the night gardener,
we were walking through a raw space where snow had fallen
and no one had walked since the snow fell.
That's right.
So you were extra excited
because there was fresh snow for us to organically fresh.
You were like on this little peninsula
in this little brook.
Could have fallen into the creek at any moment
because who knew.
It was very delicate shooting that scene,
but I remember being so excited
that we were getting that snow.
And then the weird campfire,
I mean, we could have a whole separate podcast
about Milchik's crazy tale of the temper woe
that is just one of my favorite
Tramell moments in the series.
But then Irving pushes Helly about, you know,
what really went on.
Just tell us about him.
Who?
The Night Gardener.
Oh, Irv, come on.
Did he have a flashlight?
Hmm?
What was he wearing?
What is your deal right now, dude?
What color was his shirt?
He really kind of makes a spectacle of it, really embarrasses her in front of everyone. Yes, yes he does.
And then he goes off into the forest
and has this weird dream.
At the same time, this huge experience happens in the show,
which is that you and Heli sleep together.
And as that's happening, Irving is having this dream
where the temper woe shows up.
And maybe for a second,
I think you might see an image of like
just the slightest image of Heli in her face.
And then he wakes up knowing that he has to confront her
and confronts her out by the waterfall.
So it's almost like there have been some random puzzle pieces
scattered in front of Irving now for a few episodes.
And it's this dream that is abstract,
but it's the dream that sort of puts them together
and he knows when he wakes up, he knows what's going on.
Yeah, and I think he's been trusting his instincts more
from these dreams that he's been having
from season one too.
But let's take a listen to that scene.
Mr. Milchak! Come!
Mike!
Mr. Milchak!
Mr. Milchak!
Mike!
Hell, hey!
Turn him back, Mr. Milchak!
What are you doing, man?
Turn him back!
Earth, what the fuck?
She's an outie! Stop!
She's been an outie the whole time ever since she came back!
Irving!
You stop!
No!
Stop it!
Irving stop this!
She's a fucking mole!
What are you doing?
I'm gonna kill her Mr. Milchak! Ah! Ooh!
The jig is up at this point.
Yeah, yeah.
And this was, I mean, what a, you know,
this was a scene that was a bear to shoot.
I mean, you're, you know, you guys are up on a cliff.
He had to attempt to drown Brit in this icy cold water.
So cold.
There were so many aspects to shooting this scene
to put it all together.
But really it's one of my favorite Irving John Titoro
moments in the series.
It's beautiful.
And do you want to talk about the closeup
of Helly being dunked in the water,
being shot later at our stages up on a platform of sorts?
We had to create a tank, a little mini tank
that we could put the camera under
and have a camera person,
a scuba diving camera person underneath
so that they could see the closeup on Britt's face
when she transitions and several transitions.
But I have to say, John's reading when he says,
she's a fucking mole.
It's this aspect of Irving,
it's just like this strong, dark, incredibly,
forceful version of Irving that we've never seen before.
And that whole scene, as challenging as it was to shoot,
just it's the acting I think is just so great there
where Milchik banishes him.
And I think it's pretty emotional.
John is world-class and you see it here.
He's a heavyweight.
Yeah.
He's one of the greats.
And I love that when Zach is yelling out,
cause he's like, you just hear the pain in his voice.
That was emotional.
I remember it being emotional on set watching John walk away.
I remember we were off camera just being there
for eyeline for John, but we were all weeping,
watching him turn around and walk away.
It was really, because also, you know,
Irv from the moment he smashes the egg in the book
in season one, he has not only defined for himself
what right and wrong is,
but I think he's been a living definition of right and wrong for the rest of us.
And him being excommunicated in that moment was heartbreaking.
Yeah.
Your workspace will be cleared and any personal items discarded.
Your file, including any and all professional interactions and personal relations,
will be purged and destroyed.
It will be as if you, Irving B., never even existed nor drew a single breath upon this earth.
May Keir's mercy follow you into the eternal dark.
Now.
And I remember thinking about how Milchik could do this because we had discussions about, well, how is he going to turn him off?
How is he going to, are there going to be security guards that come and drag him away?
What's going to happen?
And we came to the conclusion that something in Irving is probably accepting this and the strength of the mind
control that Milchik has and they have over these innies is so strong. But I think ultimately
there's something in Irving that accepts his fate and maybe on some level, you know, the love sickness
for Bert or something in there,
he has to somehow.
And watching Jon come to that realization is pretty amazing.
Yeah, I think the moment he makes the decision
to out her as who she is, he knows he's done for.
And he's doing it for his brethren there,
his compadres.
Right, but he does tell Dylan to hang in there.
Yep.
All right, before we go, it's time to check in
with our telepathic friend, Zach Cherry,
to find out what he thinks.
The octopus of us all.
The octopus that is Zach Cherry.
What he knows deep in his heart will happen in episode five.
Let's here.
Hello again, it's Zack here.
You know what time of the episode it is.
This is your favorite part of the episode.
The feedback has been coming in and people are saying,
they skip right to this part.
Sorry Ben and Adam, but it's what I've heard.
Anyway, you know what's coming next time
on Severance. You know we've seen the innies have one field trip and now I think it's time to see
them have another. They're gonna go to the mall and watch a movie. Wow, their first movie. That's
exciting. What was your first movie? Call in and tell Ben and Adam
What is the first movie you ever watched for me?
It was the movie meet the parents starring my friend Ben Stiller. I watched that was the first movie I ever saw
Okay, all right, wait, you. You know what? Wait a minute.
So much of that just doesn't add up.
His first movie at 20?
Yeah, his first movie was at 20 years old.
He's just trying to get to me.
Yeah, he is.
He's trying to make us feel old.
It's not gonna work, Zach, all right?
I'm sure your first movie was probably like Madagascar
or something like that.
Exactly, something else Ben Stiller created or is a part of.
Yeah, right.
It's nice.
Isn't it nice to be at that point of your career
where people come up and say,
I grew up watching you.
It happened to me in front of you.
I saw you.
And you were so happy that I experienced that.
I was like, welcome to my world.
It was someone that came up and said,
I've been watching you since I was a little kid
and you mean so much to me, which was lovely
and so kind of them to come up and say,
but it strikes a particular chord when someone says,
because you know when you're out acting in front of cameras,
you were a grownup, which means you are now an old person.
It's also the person telling you,
when you look at the person, you go,
well, this person is like maybe like almost middle-aged.
Exactly.
That's the infuriating part.
And you're younger than I am, but I have come,
I've been dealing with this for a while now,
and I've come around to like appreciating it.
Like I don't even have any weirdness about it now.
I really do appreciate it.
Yeah.
No joking.
But it was fun to watch you really experience it
for the first time and just the pale wash of,
that's like, oh my God.
I didn't even know it was apparent
what I was going through,
but then I just turned my head and you're like, yeah.
See?
Zach Cherry is 48, by the way.
Yeah, he's older than both of us.
All right, we did it.
We did it, man.
We did.
We are done and that is it for this episode.
The Severance Podcast with Ben and Adam will be back next week to talk about season two,
episode five.
And you can stream every episode of Severance on Apple TV Plus
with new episodes coming out every Friday.
And then make sure you're listening to our podcast,
which drops right after the episode airs.
The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller and Adam Scott
is a presentation of Odyssey, Pineapple Street Studios,
Red Hour Productions, and Great Scott Productions.
If you like the show, be sure to rate and review this podcast on Apple Podcasts,
the Odyssey app, or your other podcast platform of choice. Our executive producers are Barry Finkel,
Henry Miloski, Gabrielle Lewis, Jenner Weiss Berman, and Leah Reese Dennis. This show is
produced by Zandra Ellen, Ben Goldberg, and Naomi Scott. This episode was mixed and mastered by Chris Basil.
We had additional engineering from Javi Krustas and Davy Sumner.
Show clips are courtesy of Fifth Season. Music by Theodore Shapiro.
Special thanks to the team at Odyssey, Maura Curran, Eric Donnelly, Michael Lavey, Melissa Wester, Matt Casey, Kate Rose, Kirk Courtney, and Hillary Shuff.
And the team at Red Hour, John Lesher, Carolina Pesakov, John Pablo Antonetti,
Martin Baldaruten, Ashwin Ramesh, Maria Noto, John Baker, and Oliver Acker.
And at Great Scott, Kevin Cotter, Josh Martin, and Christie Smith at Rise Management.
We had additional production help from Kristen Torres and Melissa Slaughter.
I'm Ben Stiller.
And I'm Adam Scott.
Thanks for listening.
And how dare you, Mr. Milchik, for throwing out my marshmallows.
I am a team player.