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 talks to IndieWire about her role in 'Severance' Season 2 as well as David Lynch's 'Lost Highway'. INTERVIEW.
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.
What’s up with the goats? And what is Lumon doing? Yeah, I think I know essentially the answers to those questions,” said Adam Scott.
On Thursday night’s (Jan. 16) episode of Watch What Happens Live, host Andy Cohen enlisted the Severance star in a game of “Arquette It or Forget It.” If she had ever done one of the “outlandish situations” Cohen presented, she had to say “Arquette it.” But if she didn’t, she had to say “forget it.”
Not only that, but she'll also spend much of this season questioning her allegiance to Lumon Industries, the clandestine biotechnological megacorporation that she's loyally served for throughout her adult life.
Following David Lynch's death at 78, 'Lost Highway' actress Patricia Arquette reacted to the news during an interview.
For those who may not know, Patricia Arquette and David Lynch collaborated on the 1997 neo-noir thriller Lost Highway. In the film, Arquette portrayed two distinct roles, with Balthazar Getty also being part of the cast.
"Severance" is one of the most critically acclaimed recent TV series, and Academy Award-winning star Arquette spoke to Newsweek.
“Severance” follows the lives of a group of workers at a company called Lumon Industries who have agreed to undergo a procedure known as “severance.” During this operation, a device — the Severance Chip — is inserted into their brains. It separates their work selves, known as “innies,” from their home selves, known as “outies.”
Season one finished nearly three years ago, before the end of pandemic mask mandates, Hollywood strikes and America's reckoning with return-to-office policies. Erickson says all that informed his writing for season two.