Meet the Actor Behind ‘Son of Zorn’s’ Animated Hero

September 23, 2016 10:30am PT by Jennifer Konerman

Stand-in actor Dan Lippert, showrunner Sally Bradford McKenna and co-star Tim Meadows share how Jason Sudeikis' animated character comes to life on the Fox live-action/animated comedy.

Courtesy of Fox

Stand-in actor Dan Lippert, showrunner Sally Bradford McKenna and co-star Tim Meadows share how Jason Sudeikis’ animated character comes to life on the Fox live-action/animated comedy.

Dan Lippert, the unsung hero of Son of Zorn, will never once be seen playing the title character he’s been on set for hours to create. 

He is the man behind the man of Fox’s freshman hybrid comedy that revolves around Zorn, the animated Defender of Zephyria, as he returns to Orange County to reunite with his live-action family.

The style of the series creates several challenges for showrunner Sally Bradford McKenna, who says the hybrid format can often feel like creating two separate shows. But it’s also an interesting creative challenge for her and the show’s cast of Cheryl Hines, Johnny Pemberton and Tim Meadows, who first act with stand-in actor Lippert, and second with nobody at all and third and finally with an animated character. 

In order to create the most realistic interactions possible, the cast first shoots each scene with Lippert. The actor, who is 6-foot-7, is there to resemble Zorn for the rest of the cast with his height and build (once he puts on a Hans and Franz-like muscle suit).

“We needed a big enough guy to take up the space, to replicate what Zorn would be doing in that space,” says Bradford McKenna. “And he needed to be able to play with the other actors, so that actors wouldn’t have to act all day with a tennis ball or a giant X. They can work off each other.”

She says the hybrid format is often “like you’re shooting two shows,” so it gets complicated on set, but it’s worth it in the end to have the cast, all with backgrounds in comedy, to be able to bounce ideas off of a fellow actor with improv experience.

For Lippert, being on set is an “odd experience,” knowing that he will eventually be taken out of scenes in favor of the animated Zorn, voiced by Jason Sudeikis.

“You exist in this weird limbo world where all your choices have to be made through the lens of knowing that a much cooler looking, more imposing body is going to be saying the lines,” says Lippert. “It helped that I had to wear fake muscles so that I was not only tall like Zorn, but also physically built the same way.”

Lippert adds that occasionally, directors will show him Sudeikis’ take on certain lines so he can adjust his behavior on set accordingly, but typically, almost all of Sudeikis’ recording takes place after Lippert’s job is done.

“I found that it was easiest to do my own personal take on Zorn, knowing that if I did any sort of Sudeikis impression, I wouldn’t do it any justice and I’d end up just sounding like a C-rate version of the real thing,” he says.

Exec producers Phil Lord and Chris Miller have said that Sudeikis was the perfect choice for Zorn because of his Midwestern, “’Aw, shucks’ way of saying things.” As the stand-in actor for him, Lippert says that helps to keep in mind on set. “Zorn is regularly very oblivious about how mean and biting he can be, and Jason gave him an almost folksy politeness which helps undercut his words and endears you to him,” says Lippert. “So I tried to take that into consideration.”

For the next step, Lippert leaves and the cast does another take with no one there at all. Finally, the scenes with sketched-in versions of Zorn make their way to Sudeikis, who voices the title character, so it’s very rare that the cast actually interacts with Sudeikis.

“We’ll have them do the scene as an art animation director is on set sketching out what Zorn will look like – perspective, dimension, how big he’ll be, where he’s gonna move, how he’s gonna move,” says Bradford McKenna.

For example, for a scene in which Zorn shakes Craig’s (Tim Meadows) hand, the editing team will have three scenes to work with: one with Lippert as a stand-in, one with him shaking hands with air and one with him shaking hands with a sketched-in Zorn for perspective. Scenes where Zorn has to hand things to a live-action character are an entirely different story. “We try to minimize that,” says Bradford McKenna.

Meadows, who doesn’t have a lot of experience in green screen work and has trouble with mime work (“When I ‘mime’ a phone, during an improv show, I put my closed fist to my cheek. Which is bad because if my fist is closed how could I be holding a telephone?”), says that the scenes with animated characters are getting easier on set. “I think we’ve all learned how to make it work better as we continued to shoot the show,” says Meadows.

But he has learned one important thing: “You try to make as little eye contact with Zorn as possible because it’s difficult to match it every take. In the future I’m just going to look down at my shoes when I talk to Zorn. It’s the same way I like my fans to talk to me,” he joked.

Lippert does make an appearance on the show eventually, but not as Zorn, and viewers may have to squint to recognize him.

“It’s probably the most thankless job on the show,” she says. “It’s really a lead character. He’s the star of the show, but no one knows.”

Son of Zorn airs Sundays at 8:30 p.m. on Fox. 

Son of Zorn

Jennifer Konerman

Jennifer Konerman

THRnews@thr.com

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James Corden Investigates: Is Steve From ‘Stranger Things’ Jean-Ralphio’s Real Dad?

September 22, 2016 11:41pm PT by Jennifer Konerman

'The Late Late Show' put to rest a popular Internet conspiracy.

YouTube/CBS

Joe Keery, Ben Schwartz

‘The Late Late Show’ put to rest a popular Internet conspiracy.

Is Stranger Things’ Steve Harrington related to Parks and Recreation’s Jean-Ralphio Saperstein? 

James Corden and The Late Late Show made it their business to find out on Thursday night. 

In his special investigation, Corden first laid out the facts: Stranger Things and Parks and Recreation both take place in Indiana, and because of the shows’ timelines and the characters’ remarkably similar hair dos, many fans have theorized that Steve is, in fact, Jean-Ralphio’s father. 

Actors Joe Keery (Steve) and Ben Schwartz (Jean-Ralphio) sat down with Entertainment Tonight’s Nischelle Turner to find out if the Internet conspiracy is true. 

After both appearing in the same outfit with the same mannerisms, they answered almost exactly the same in Turner’s speed round and miming exercise. 

The interview concluded with a touching father-and-son montage. “You’re my father,” said Schwartz. “We’ve got to catch up on some lost time,” Keery added. 

Watch the segment below. 

James Corden Stranger Things

Jennifer Konerman

Jennifer Konerman

THRnews@thr.com

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Phil Lord and Chris Miller: TV Is Finally “Weird Enough” for Fox’s ‘Son of Zorn’

September 09, 2016 10:45am PT by Jennifer Konerman

"In general, our philosophy about TV is that the marketplace is ready for stuff that is unique and specific and somewhat weird."

FOX; Ben A. Pruchnie/Getty Images

‘Son of Zorn’, Inset: Chris Miller, Phil Lord

“In general, our philosophy about TV is that the marketplace is ready for stuff that is unique and specific and somewhat weird.”

Phil Lord and Chris Miller have multiple Lego films in the works, another 21 Jump Street sequel, and as they prepare for the Star Wars Han Solo standalone film, they are busy making their mark with a few more shows on broadcast television. 

The prolific producing duo has plans to send Adam Pally back in time for Fox’s midseason comedy Making History, but first up is Son of Zorn, a hybrid live-action/animated family comedy starring Jason Sudeikis set to bow Sunday with a special preview on Fox. 

Sudeikis voices the title character in Son of Zorn, which follows a fish-out-of-water father who returns home after years away to reconnect with his ex-wife (Cheryl Hines) and son (Johnny Pemberton). Zorn is the Defender of Zephyria, an island in the Pacific Ocean where everything is animated (Lord and Miller compare it to Darfur: People “don’t really know anything about it but they act like they do”). Zorn finds himself adapting to suburban life in Orange County, settling down in an apartment, holding down a cubicle job for a no-nonsense boss (Artemis Pebdani) and even trying to get along with his ex-wife’s new fiancé (Tim Meadows).

The hybrid comedy is a long time in the making for Lord and Miller, who now join an animated lineup on Fox that also includes The Simpsons, Bob’s Burgers and Family Guy. Wilfred’s Reed Agnew and Eli Jorne co-created the show and co-wrote the pilot, which is directed by Eric Appel, and Sally Bradford McKenna (The Grinder) serves as showrunner.

THR caught up with Lord and Miller — who have an overall deal at Zorn producers 20th Century Fox TV — to discuss the origins of the show, when the animated character is at his best (“It’s really funny to watch him just try to open up a bag of Doritos”) and the show’s all-star comedy lineup (“Tim Meadows can say the phonebook and I’m scream-laughing for some reason”).

After your experience in both live action and animation, what inspired you to combine them for a show like Son of Zorn

Lord: On the first few months of this Fox deal, the guys [at the studio] there were really excited about doing a hybrid show. I think somebody there liked the idea of making a version of Ted but a TV show. So we thought about a hybrid-ized family and what it would be like if you were the son of somebody who was animated and what that might feel like, and then it started to feel like something worth doing. We started thinking about the worst possible dad you could have. How could he be as big a misfit as possible? So that was it, and we had great partners to make our crummy ideas actually decent.

You previously created the animated comedy Clone High. What lessons did you take from shows like that, but also Last Man on Earth and Lego Movie in creating Zorn

Miller: It is sort of Clone High meets Last Man on Earth in a weird way. In general, our philosophy about TV is that the marketplace is ready for stuff that is unique and specific and somewhat weird. And I feel like there are so many TV shows that have existed throughout time that you can access now, to make something that feels like it hasn’t been done before is exciting. There was a time where doing a generic sitcom was the plan, but now, the marketplace is weird enough for our personal taste.

How do you see Son of Zorn fitting into the world of family comedies? Are there any family comedies you’re fans of that you take inspiration from? 

Lord: It’s well-trod territory where much smarter guys than us have done a great job. For us it was a neat way to talk about divorced families, because it’s hard to make that funny. This seemed like a way to do it and have it not be a drag. The ironic thing is this very crazy show seems to work best when it’s as grounded as possible. It’s really funny to watch him just try to open up a bag of Doritos. When the stories are about real, observable family behavior and relationships it just seems to be a lot better. When it’s at its best, the animated stuff is really heightening something we recognize.

Miller: The dynamic of the outrageousness of his world and the things that happen in his world and the down-to-earth reality of our world, that’s what provides the tension of the show. He has a lot of weird magical implements and odd barbarian traditions that work their way into the story, so it’s always trying to balance a sort of ridiculousness with observable minutiae.

What about the other animated comedies Zorn is joining on the Fox lineup (The Simpsons, Family Guy, etc.)? 

Miller: We really love all those shows in the Fox animated world. Growing up on The Simpsons, I learned how to write comedy from finding a voice that was even a quarter as funny as that show. That’s the foundation of everything we believe in, so it’s pretty great to be connected with that. I think it fits in pretty well.

What is the relationship between the live-action world and Zorn’s animated home world? Do you envision the show moving into his animated world for any period of time?  

Chris Miller: He’s often Facetiming throughout, and other characters from Zephyria come to visit. The idea is basically that it’s an island nation that is just really weird, but you can fly there in an airplane. People treat it as though it were a war-torn nation like Darfur — they don’t really know anything about it but they act like they do.

How did Sudeikis (who also appears in Last Man on Earth) get involved with the show?

Lord: We begged him. It’s not a very sexy story, but we basically listened to a whole lot of voices and looked at the drawing of Zorn, and tried to figure out which one sounded the best, and if we could find a great voice that also embodied the positive outlook of the guy, then it’s a home run. And Jason is a really funny person. He’s got a really interesting voice for animation, and he’s really likeable even when he’s playing characters that are horrible people. We needed a guy where you thought to yourself, ‘Oh he doesn’t mean it,’ or ‘He’s just not understanding the situation and if he did he would do the right thing.’ There’s a way to play that character really mean or really arch, but he’s able to make everything feel real and down to earth. He’s a Midwestern guy, he’s got this ‘Aw shucks’ way of saying things, which is really critical. 

You have a busy few years coming up with the Han Solo Star Wars film, not to mention the Lego movie follow-ups. How does that affect the scheduling of Last Man on Earth and Son of Zorn? How hands-on are you with all of these projects? 

Lord: The fantasy is that we are completely obsolete and don’t have to do anything. We try to be really involved in the early goings because that’s where you discover what the show is. You can’t figure it all out on the pilot, you’re building a machine to continuously crank out creativity and there’s a lot of tweaking that has to happen and we try to be as supportive as we can as early as we can. With Last Man, at this point it is what it is, and those guys run with it. We thankfully are mostly spectators at this point and it’s great. That show has figured itself out. Zorn was a bit of elbow grease, just discovering what the show needed and wanted to be.

Miller: For Making History, we’re a little more hands on because it’s the first season but because we’re far away it really comes down to these great voices behind the shows. The joy of producing, if there is any joy in producing, it is that you get to watch people that you admire work and you get to reflect back to them what is inspiring to you about their work. And then hopefully just enjoy the spoils.

Son of Zorn previews its first episode on Sept. 11 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Fox, and premieres on Sept. 25. 

Son of Zorn

Jennifer Konerman

Jennifer Konerman

THRnews@thr.com

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