“Severance” is beloved by critics and audiences alike. But there was a time when star Adam Scott and Ben Stiller, who executive produces and directs the Apple TV+ series, worried it might never get made. The show — a dark, surrealist commentary on our work-obsessed culture that was hardly guaranteed to reap mass appeal — was set to start production on its first season in March 2020.
Then the lockdowns began. One pandemic, two historic Hollywood strikes and a three-year gap between Seasons 1 and 2 later, Apple TV+ confirmed a third season Friday, the morning after the release of the second season’s finale. Scott and Stiller spoke to The Associated Press in advance; the interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
Adam, was it challenging to get back into character after all this time?
SCOTT: It’s funny because I feel like I was kind of working on it the whole time. I mean, I guess doing press and talking about the character and the show is sort of keeping it kind of fresh in my mind the whole time. But also, Ben and Dan (Erickson, the show’s creator, writer and executive producer) and I talk all the time and I’m always peppering them with questions about where things are going or what we’re doing.
We were kind of always talking about it and kind of mulling it over the entire time so, by the time we started shooting, I did feel pretty prepped and ready to go in. But it was challenging because, like the show itself, the character — both the “innie” and the “outie” — kind of expand a little bit and the aperture sort of widens.
So much time has passed since the first season. Did the arc of this season or your approach to any of it change from when you initially thought you were going to make Season 2?
STILLER: I mean, it’s constantly in process. That’s what the process of making the show was on Season 1 and also on Season 2. And I don’t know if I could explain the process, but it’s very fluid, even though it’s obviously a show that has a lot of specifics that we’re always trying to think about. That’s, I think, one of the reasons why it’s fluid actually, is because we’re always looking at what we’re doing and looking back at what we’ve shot and edited and just really trying to track it. It goes on all the way through until the final sound mix, really.
So, you start filming Season 2 and then the strike happened?
STILLER: Yeah. We started in October 2022 and we shot through until the strike and we had completed about seven episodes at that point. And then we had to regroup for the last three after the strike.
Did you have to go back and reshoot any of it?
STILLER: In both seasons, we constantly go back and we’re always looking at stuff and sometimes we’ll pick up something. But that’s part of the process of making the show. And one of the, I think, luxuries of being able to make the show like this is that we’re able to kind of look at what we made and go, “Wait, you know, this doesn’t work,” or “That doesn’t work,” or “Let’s try this new idea.” So, any time we’ve had delays, especially the first season we were in prep and were about to start shooting, then COVID hit so we had an extra six months to work on the scripts and all the other ideas that we were developing.
SCOTT: We were, of course, in full support of the strikes, both writers and actors. But yeah, for this show in particular, we were just like, “Good Lord. OK, let’s close up shop and see when we can get back together.” And it ended up, like Ben said, being beneficial in the long run.
Associated Press