Severance' star Patricia Arquette tells PEOPLE how it's "kind of fun" when her "little inner Cobel," referring to her character on the Apple TV+ series, comes out between takes on set.
Patricia Arquette was on-camera Thursday when she found out that David Lynch, who directed her in the 1997 film Lost Highway, had died. She and the cast of Apple TV+ show Severance were being interviewed on SiriusXM's Radio Andy.
Patricia Arquette laments the fact that -- despite their both having starred in the film "True Romance" and Apple TV+ series "Severance" -- she has never actually shared the screen with Christopher Walken.
Severance is back and hitting the ground running in its Season 2 premiere, “Hello, Ms. Cobel,” which picks up in Lumon’s offices, moments after Mark’s ( Adam Scott) innie is reactivated following Season 1’s fateful revelation.
Apple TV+ show ‘Severance’, directed by Ben Stiller, is being called one of the greatest television shows of all time, and today we will discuss why. The show follows a simple concept – let’s make a world where people can separate their personal and work lives.
Apple TV+ Though Severance tackles dark subject matter, the Apple TV+ thriller's cast and crew still find ways to bring the joy together. "I think we had 186 days of shooting this season. So, we all had a lot of moments together,
Patricia Arquette's belief that the premise of her hit TV show Severance ... Coproduced by Zoolander actor Ben Stiller, who also directs many of the episodes, Severance featured in many critics' 'best of' lists when it first aired in 2022.
Severance stars Patricia Arquette and Tramell Tillman tease a bit more tension between Cobel and Milchick in season 2 - and we're so ready for it. "Well, he's usurped me basically . It's like he has taken my position and I feel very injured and hostile about that.
You can watch any released episodes of Severance season two for free by taking advantage of an Apple TV+ seven-day free trial, which will give you access to the show and all other content on the platform, including all episodes from the first season.
The series is an exquisite, masterful work of TV, cramming sci-fi creepiness, wry social commentary and black humor inside of a tightly constructed story.
The team is also being promised workplace reform - including improved staff perks. After all, nothing better conveyed Lumon's unnerving forced fun than its heavily rationed waffle, melon and single-track dance parties.