Succession Director Mark Mylod Breaks Down That Scene From Connor's Wedding
Released on 05/25/2023
We will pocket that sweet bonus loot.
Uh huh.
One thing I love in this scene is
that she's been married to him, I think in story
for at least a year, and he's still Tom Wambsgans.
There's a lovely lack of intimacy to that, isn't there?
Hi, I'm Mark Mylod,
I'm the director and executive producer on Succession,
and I'm here to talk about episode three Connor's Wedding.
If you haven't seen Connor's Wedding,
episode three of succession, please switch off right now.
It's quite a big spoiler.
This is Notes on a Scene.
[Tom] Your dad is very sick.
He's very, very sick.
What?
[Kendall] What?
It's, Tom, apparently dad's sick.
What do you mean he's sick?
Like sick, like?
What's going on?
Tom? Tom, are you still there?
Connor's wedding and Logan's death overlap
partly as a script device, really.
There's a bait and switch there.
We point the audience's attention
in one direction and the real thing creeps up
and crashes you on the head from behind.
The kind of classic juxtaposition of that.
And also because on Succession,
we really like to mess up weddings.
Hi. Hi. Hi.
Hey.
Hey, so the idea is that dad will pop by,
be dock side, and you guys are up here.
Oh. Oh, okay.
You think he's gonna pop by?
Spoke with Kerry, here's hoping
Oh.
Even though the characters are somewhat generous
in that they've turned up, unlike Logan,
there is a statement, I think by the characters
as to how much effort they've put in.
We look at Connor here, lovely black tie.
We look at Kendall here,
maybe should have a tie, but he doesn't.
We look at Shiv,
she kind of put together hairs in a ponytail.
It's not, she's not exactly spent hours blowing that out.
[Tom] Hey Roman.
Yeah.
[Tom] Hey, your dad is very sick.
He's very, very sick.
What?
[Kendall] What?
It's, Tom, apparently dad's sick.
What do you mean he's sick?
Like sick, like?
What's going on?
Tom? Tom, are you still there?
Is he okay?
In the script, and speaking for Jesse,
he liked the idea of the kind of anti-Shakespearean death,
the modern day death, the death that many of us
experience in families.
That's by separation is learned by email
or phone call or text even.
And we went to most extremes there to isolate the siblings
on a boat at a wedding
and to put Logan at, you know, 35,000 feet.
Who's with him?
[Tom] He had a very serious-
Serious what?
All that performance from Matthew is live.
That is his voice.
Not like we record it separately and played it in.
Matthew was actually back
with his family in London at the time
but spent literally all day attached to the phone
going through that again and again to feed the actors.
And we did a bunch of sound tests on the phone
to make sure it would come through just the right amount.
You could understand what he was saying
but also have that slight frustration
of just having to lean in
to actually understand exactly what was going on
to put the audience into the siblings experience
as much as possible to parachute them into their skins.
Tom, what's going on? What happened?
So he was short of breath
and he went into the bathroom and-
He was gone and there was,
someone heard something and he was, we were concerned.
Tom's phone, he's not an iPhone kind of guy,
he's more of a PC, Samsung, Android kind of guy.
We basically have a meeting at the beginning
of each new season and talk about the personal props
for each character.
And phones always come into that, obviously, and we actually
leave it that very much up to the actors as well
what they feel comfortable with.
Oh, I'm an iPhone person, or I'm a, you know, Samsung,
or whatever it may be.
It became very apparent in season one
that we were going to spend an awful lot of time
shooting scenes on aircraft.
So it made both financial and logistical sense
to actually build a set, which we did.
We put green screens outside and project the sky onto that.
Pat, our DP, does this brilliant job of actually
getting that real sense of directional light come in.
So I don't think anybody has ever said,
oh, that's obviously a set, or, I hope not anyway.
When we got into post-production, into the edit,
became a real debate as to how much we should cut
between the airplane and how much we should just
stay on the siblings.
The initial idea was maybe we'll just stay
on the boat pretty much all the time, but then
what we did shoot, Matthew was so compelling
that really murkied up the argument at that point,
and we ended up cutting more to Matthew
than we initially intended just because it was just so good.
They're doing chest compressions.
Frank thinks you should speak to your dad
and I can hold the phone
I can hold the phone near him if you like.
Why does Frank think that, Tom?
We did very few takes of this entirely and, you know,
and culminating in what you are seeing here
which was the long, the half hour take.
But the very first time we did it, I didn't rehearse at all.
I gave kind of parameters to the actors,
physical parameters and a lot of those
they just discovered them for themselves.
For instance, little details, if you look
on the right of the screen here in the bar area,
and we had two bar people working behind there
so that the actors, the characters would naturally
gravitate away from there.
And then behind the characters, there's a well going down
to the next deck down and we put background down there.
You can't see them on camera
but the actors know they're there
and therefore the characters would move away from that.
We closed the doors off, we'd put a security guard outside
so we'd basically hemmed them in and pushed them
into the middle of the room without me ever saying
please stay in the middle of the room.
If I put good reasons why the character wouldn't go there,
then they won't go there.
They're so smart as actors, they'll just make
the correct choice always led by character.
A whole kind of modus operandi, I suppose for the grammar
of the show, in the shooting of it is that the camera,
we, the audience can barely keep up with the action
where we were often just one step behind it
and that's why I don't like to rehearse.
I like the camera operators to have to react
to what's happening, not to anticipate it.
where we'll often edit five frames late just after,
just after, but not to anticipate
unless there's a very good reason for doing so.
Cumulatively, I think just gives that,
helps with the tension
and that sense of barely keeping up with the action.
[Roman] Ken's gonna get Shiv.
I'm gonna get Shiv.
[people chattering]
When Kendall goes downstairs to get Sarah,
I've told him she's not gonna be close to the stairs,
so I'll give him that clue, but then he has to look for her
and therefore there's absolute authenticity to that.
Where the heck is she?
Where is she, where is she?
There she is.
And again, it's that sadism of the camera of just staying
with him in anticipation.
We know and he knows what he's about to have to do.
And again, there's that kind of classic juxtaposition
of his absolute dread, the worst moment of his life
with everybody having such a jolly time,
which felt so wonderfully cruel.
And I love Jeremy's performance.
It is so beautifully spontaneous.
He's so alive to the moment.
We had a good few hundred extras with us for a few days
on the boat, and it became very obvious what was going on.
They're smart people.
We NDA'ed everybody up the wazoo, obviously we had help
from the security team at HBO going around and talking
to people, explaining why it was so important
that we kept this secret.
But beyond that, we relied on goodwill.
You know, you can only go so far with an NDA
and if somebody posts anonymously,
there's very little you can do ultimately.
But we didn't have one leak
which I remain incredibly grateful for.
He was still breathing a minute ago,
but it's very bad.
So, Shiv's coming.
Okay. They think he's gone.
They think he's gone.
What happened?
What do you mean?
Well, they think dad died.
What?
[Roman] Yeah. No.
[Roman] I'm sorry.
No, no, I can't have that.
This performance from Sarah.
Yeah, I've seen this a hundred times
and it still absolutely flaws me.
I find her reaction throughout this scene,
I can't have that, the seeking to control
that which you can't control
and that regression to childhood.
Daddy, don't die.
Daddy, I love you.
Don't go please, not now.
I found incredibly powerful,
Jesse and I with this take
were stood next to each other at the monitor
and I just had tears rolling down my face
and I could see out my peripheral vision
that he was the same.
I was completely wiped out by her and just so in awe
in that way that Meryl Streep does, you know,
you see as soon as you say cut,
she goes, oh, how was that?
Yeah, cup of tea, you know
and she just snaps right out of it.
She has this ability to flick a switch
and to dive straight deep, deep into the character.
There's no kind of gradient in there.
It's just bang straight back in.
I find that, I think she's an incredible actor,
I really do.
Just watch the way that Sarah walks.
She walks and then she almost staggers
and then she tiptoes and it's extraordinary choice,
that kind of detail that she's aware of
and the way she uses her body to express the character
even with her back to camera.
That to me should be a masterclass
for anybody that wants to be an actor.
But I, fuck.
I don't know, I do love you.
Reading the script and working out our staging
on the airplane.
I felt very queasy about the idea
of showing Logan's body on the floor
and I didn't know whether that was good queasy or, you know,
or showing too much respect.
And, you know, and again, you know,
my whole kind of ethos of let's be sadistic
with the camera and get it right in there.
For some reason that didn't feel appropriate with Logan.
Partly, I suppose, to keep an element
of doubt with the audience.
Is he really dead?
Is it, is he, you know,
is he playing some kind of sick trick on them?
But more than anything else, just taste wise as a choice,
it didn't feel right.
It felt cheap almost to actually dip the camera down
and see him.
At some point, we wanted to absolutely definitively
and clearly say, yes, that is Logan and he is dead.
The cruelest way to do that, it seemed was
in that the almost kind of coziness
of the fireside chat of having the phone up against his ear.
What I did with this shot was, you know,
a rare cheat was to basically shoot
with a stunt double, heart compressions.
It's a one inch compression
so it can damage your ribcage.
So we had a stunt person come in
so that we could do those for real.
And then I asked Brian to come in one day
and literally to lie down for 10 seconds
I'd lined it all up.
I'd put a marker on the floor exactly
where his head should be.
We basically took his head and put it
onto the torso of the stunt person here.
That's Brian. That's not.
That's the stunt guy.
What we then did in post,
with the help of our visual effects team
was to give a slight rhythmic push to Brian's head
so it was in sync with the body compressions.
So they felt, you know, obviously united
as elements and that's one of the rare cheats that we did.
Can I speak with the pilot please, Tom?
You know, I'll call Frank's phone and he can take me
through the flight deck.
Okay. Okay.
So Frank, Kendall's gonna call your phone to be taken
through to the pilot.
Okay. Okay.
That's happening.
Jess, I need a few things.
My dad's dying.
I'm just gonna do facts, okay.
The tragedy of the episode and also the I think
the emotional truth of it is seeking
to control what we cannot.
In seeking clarity as to what's happened to their father,
they're also in denial somewhat, you know,
some more than others, particularly Roman obviously.
[Roman] All I'm saying is that we actually don't know.
That's it, that's all I'm saying.
Okay, right, well, yes, but you sound delusional.
I sound, what am I out fucking voted here?
They're seeking to control and they're falling back
on every device they possibly can to do that.
Whether it be through bratishness, as you know,
as rich people getting what rich people want.
No, I can't have that.
With Shiv or in this case with Kendall,
business school speak.
If one is, you know, firm enough, it will happen.
I shall take control.
Tell them to do it.
To do it right.
And of course that is futile.
[Kendall] We need to get, Connor, we need to tell him.
Five. Yep.
[Kendall] Okay. Come here buddy.
[Connor] What is it?
Is it important?
Come here for a sec.
What?
Alan Ruck as an actor is, well, as a person
is just the most generous human
and has spent, I think four seasons as Connor does,
slightly playing second fiddler a lot of the time.
One lovely thing about season four is that we were able
to wrap Alan's character so much into the primary narratives
and the way you just see the quality of his work
just rise up is just wonderful.
His reactions was just heartbreaking and brilliant.
They think he's dead.
Well is he?
Again, just in terms of emotional truth
it is just faultless to me.
I think it's exquisite.
He is so self effacing about it.
He credits Sarah with just giving him this, you know,
emotion to look at and therefore to react to.
He never even liked me.
Hey, Connor.
Hey, sorry. You know what?
I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I don't even know what I mean.
He did, he did.
I just, I never got the chance to make him proud of me.
He's dead.
Making it about himself, but instantly being ashamed
that he's made it about himself and instantly
switching it back to his younger siblings.
The essential beauty in all the absurdity of Connor
is that generosity of spirit.
There's an underlying kindness to that
which I find incredibly touching.
I can't do this, okay.
Episode three is obviously a game changer.
The central conflict has been, you know,
one or more of the siblings in conflict with their father.
Now Logan has died,
that changes the whole parameter
of where will the conflict be and the fulfillment
of the promise and the title of the show, who will succeed?
Even though we see the siblings as united
by their grief as we've ever seen them,
we know also that that the portent is not good.
We know that there will be a Darwinian fight
for survival and to come out on top.
It's difficult to define succession, obviously.
That's one of its many strengths.
I don't think of it as a comedy.
I think it's very funny,
but if I had to put a label on it, for me it's a tragedy.
I agree with Jeremy Strong on that.
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