The Denver Post

The doctor is in too deep

Will Ferrell and Paul Rudd on “The Shrink Next Door”

- By Dave Itzkoff Q : Did the two of you ever cross paths before you worked together on “Anchorman”? Q : How did you both end up on “The Shrink Next Door”? Q : What interested you about the podcast? Ryan Lowry, © The New York Times Co. Q : Do you think the

As viewers, we are preconditi­oned to expect a zany comedy when we see Will Ferrell and Paul Rudd paired up, thanks to past collaborat­ions like the madcap 2004 hit “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy” and its equally classy 2013 sequel, “Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues.”

But “The Shrink Next Door,” which re-teams them for the first time in eight years, is not such a project. This Apple TV+ limited series, which debuted Nov. 12, is adapted from the Wondery and Bloomberg Media podcast that chronicled the true story of Dr. Isaac Herschkopf, a psychiatri­st who insinuated himself into the life of his patient Marty Markowitz — at first to Markowitz’s benefit and delight, and then to increasing­ly manipulati­ve ends.

(The real Herschkopf was ordered in April to surrender his license to practice in New York after a committee convened by the state Health Department found him guilty of multiple profession­al violations. In a telephone interview, Herschkopf said he was appealing the ruling.)

Ferrell plays the warmhearte­d, downtrodde­n Marty, and Rudd plays the likable but insidious

Dr. Ike, as the therapist is most commonly known in the show. Both actors see “The Shrink

Next Door” as an opportunit­y to take on characters with more complexity than they often get to play, and inhabit them for longer than they could in a typical film.

Seated alongside each other in the drawing room of a downtown Manhattan hotel in late October, Rudd and Ferrell riffed gamely at times, like they were once again playing their oblivious “Anchorman” characters. As they explained, they were eager to be in front of audiences again — even a crowd consisting of a lone reporter — and to share one of the first things they had made since the pandemic started.

But beyond that excitement, both actors admitted to a certain anxiety about the project. They said they were unsure whether viewers would embrace them without the outrageous gags and improvisat­ional one-upmanship that defined their previous work together.

“It’s not a cartoon in any way,” Rudd said. “As dark as the story can get — and people were really hurt — there is something so absurd that it’s funny. You can have humor and real drama, simultaneo­usly.”

Ferrell added, “There’d be days where we’d start with something lightheart­ed, and then the second half of the day was Paul and I really getting into an intense, emotional scene. To shift in those ways was really challengin­g.”

Ferrell and Rudd spoke further about the making of “The Shrink Next Door,” the questions that its story raises and what it portends for show business. These are edited excerpts from that conversati­on.

Rudd: Neither one of us can recall. I certainly was a fan of Will’s and knew who he was before “Anchorman.”

Ferrell: And I’m all about “Clueless.”

Rudd: As if.

Ferrell: From the get-go, Paul came in and read for Brian Fantana and was amazing. But it was like, “By the way, Paul Rudd is calling every hour and will not let this go.”

Rudd: I think I just wore them down. I didn’t play it cool.

Ferrell: He was, in the modern vernacular, a bit thirsty.

Ferrell: Paul and (Michael) Showalter (a director and executive producer of the series) were pursuing it on their own, and then I got a call from my agency going, “Have you ever heard of this podcast? They’re thinking about making it.” And then we all started talking. Everyone was asking Paul, would you do it with Will? I was being asked, would you do it with Paul? Kismet.

Ferrell: My initial reaction was, OK, I’ll listen to it, but I would be impervious to being taken advantage of like that. And then you start to hear about how, piece by piece, it happens. And before he knew it, he was up to his neck. I also like that Marty goes full circle and comes out of it finally willing to stand up for himself. Dare I say, you go from feeling sorry for Marty to feeling sorry for Ike. Which is wild.

Rudd: (with mock offense) It’s not so wild! What are you talking about? I really like the challenge of finding the human elements and the empathetic qualities in the guy — to play somebody who people might consider villainous but try to not make him that.

Ferrell: While at first glance it would appear to have a bad guy and a good guy, Georgia (Pritchett, the series writer) wanted to show that it’s somewhat gray. They both, at various times, needed each other in this weird way.

Rudd: You can’t just say this is straight-up manipulati­on and there are no emotions there. I think they cared about each other.

Ferrell: Even when we sat down with Marty, despite everything he went through, he would still talk about, “We built the tennis court here, and that was all Ike’s idea. I wouldn’t have done that if it wasn’t for Ike.” He’d still give him props in a weird, backward way.

Ferrell: He can go to that place where the pain is still at the surface. We asked him, “Why are you willing to share this?” A lot of people would just feel shame and never want to talk about this again. And that’s where it felt like he was at peace.

Rudd: By the time we met with him, the podcast had already been out, so it wasn’t as if he felt guarded. He was very forthcomin­g.

Rudd: Never met him. Never talked to him. I talked to Joe Nocera (the writer and host of the original podcast). I gathered that Ike’s take on this would clearly be very different. I’m sure if you asked him now, he’d say, “No, I helped him.” I imagine he doesn’t think he did anything wrong. I don’t know for sure. We’re all capable of being a decent person and then taking advantage of people. Sometimes we don’t even realize we’re doing it.

(In the telephone interview, Herschkopf said he had no interactio­ns with the actors or creators. “No one from the TV series ever contacted me, ever reached out to me in any form whatsoever,” he said. Herschkopf said he had seen only a preview of the show but compared it to “playing telephone” by perpetuati­ng what he said were errors and fabricatio­ns in the podcast: “It’s a fiction of a fiction,” he said. “Each copy becomes further and further from the truth.” A press representa­tive for Apple referred questions to MRC, a studio that produced “The Shrink Next Door.” MRC declined to comment.)

Ferrell: I am not Jewish — Rudd: (He feigns shock, stands up from his seat and leans on a nearby fireplace mantel.) I’ve just got to walk this off.

Ferrell: I was going to tell you. My stepmom is.

Rudd: OK. (He returns to his seat.)

Ferrell: It is central to the story. It is so much the fabric. What was important to me and to all of us was that it was all depicted faithfully — that we were honest and true to the rituals and the culture.

Rudd: There were things I’m familiar with because I am Jewish. Ike’s Judaism influenced how he lived, who he was. It was important to him. They are colors, and we’re playing a human being first and not so much the religion that they are.

Ferrell: Outside of our abject fear of whether we could? At least, I’ll speak for myself.

Rudd: No, no, you can speak for me.

Ferrell: My white-hot, abject fear of whether I could even accomplish it? That aside? It was thrilling.

Rudd: There was an awareness of, are people just going to hate this because it’s not what they want to see us doing?

Ferrell: We’d talk almost every day — either, “This is kind of fun to see this different course we’re on,” or, “People are going to go, ‘Nope, that’s not what we want to see these two people do.’ ”

Rudd: We always want to tell interestin­g stories, and that delineatio­n matters less and less. Everyone’s watching movies on TV now anyway.

Ferrell: This is a limited series — great, let’s try that. But it’s not so much a function of, I want to do this because I haven’t done it before. It was just a chance to play these characters and tell this story.

Rudd: There are a lot of movies that were made in the last 10, 15 years — there’s no way they’d get made now. They’re just not putting up the money for it. What is it going to be like in a year, with people going to movies during COVID? I certainly hope movies don’t go away, and I don’t think they will.

Ferrell: I still listen to AM radio in my car.

Rudd: You have a car?

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