Q&A: ‘Veep’ can’t get crazy enough to satirize real-life politics, cast says

The cast of HBO’s caustic political comedy series “Veep” used to have an Emmy night tradition of gathering after the show and taking a picture together, their hands flashing the L-shaped loser gesture. (Or, taken another way: Here’s to you, “Modern Family”!)
That changed in September when “Veep” won the comedy series Emmy for its fourth season. This year, the program has a new showrunner, David Mandel, but its biting brilliance remains intact. Its main competition is the circus on the nightly news, screwball comedy so nuts, says “Veep” cast member Tony Hale, “it makes you wonder just how crazy it is behind the scenes.”
“I don’t think I want to see that show,” “Veep” star Julia Louis-Dreyfus says.
We sat down recently with Louis-Dreyfus (who plays Selina Meyer, the onetime veep, now embattled president), Hale (Selina’s devoted assistant, Gary Walsh) and Matt Walsh (Mike McLintock, White House communications director) to talk about the show’s vision thing and how it might evolve in a Trump America.
Louis-Dreyfus: No. It’s crazy right now. There’s always these extraordinary things we shoot on our show that, two or three months later, happen in politics. But it’s never been like this.
The other day, I was watching CNN and the former president of Mexico, Vicente Fox, was talking about the Trump wall and he said, “I am not going to pay for that (expletive) wall.” He said (expletive) and it was on television, and I’m like, “What has happened?”
And all this … right now in Trump crazy town, we’re just in the stratosphere.
Hale: It’s the kind of thing where if we wrote this kind of stuff, people would say, “It’s too extreme.”
Louis-Dreyfus: We used to feel the show was a satire, and now it feels like a somber documentary by comparison.
Louis-Dreyfus: For starters, we’ll be shooting it in Canada.
Walsh: Or Mexico, behind a wall.
Louis-Dreyfus: The truth is, we work very hard to keep our show separate. The most recent historical reality we allude to is Jimmy Carter. So whoever is president, we’ll continue in our own alternate universe.
Hale: Everybody in Washington thinks we’re making fun of the other side. That won’t ever change.
Walsh: Nobody in politics see themselves as being that ridiculous or inept.
Walsh: There was the Australian prime minister (Malcolm Turnbull) who had your “continuity with change” motto about a month ago, right?
Louis-Dreyfus: It was unbelievable! It was actually his slogan for his new agenda. We try to come up with the most outlandish things and look what happens.
Louis-Dreyfus: Like the relationship between a baseball and a bat. Mike keeps coming around the home plate to be hit. Mike also has a moral compass, which is really fun when it rears its beautiful head for us to bat it away. He’s a dear, incompetent soul.
Walsh: He’s like a kid piping up in the adults’ room.
Walsh: Stairs are Mike’s ruin. The writers like to give me a lot of sweaty moments.
Louis-Dreyfus: You’re looking at her. Selina is the ruin of Selina. But she will never see it that way. She blames everyone around her. But she brings it on herself.
Louis-Dreyfus: Yes. But also: It’s a comedy show. Incompetency is funny.
Hale: But I also think that we know stuff about her and if she lets us go, she knows we might let those secrets out.
Hale: Not serving her, not being close to her, is a punishment! A close second would be seeing her with other men.
Walsh: Gary has a very high standard for her.
Hale: I want to be her man.
Walsh: She should date someone who looks exactly like Gary.
Louis-Dreyfus: That’s a good idea.
Walsh: And Gary doesn’t see it. That would be really weird.
Hale: Season 6!
(Here, Louis-Dreyfus jokes that the two haven’t slept together, and Hale laughs for a solid minute.)
Hale: She feels the tension, believe me!
Louis-Dreyfus: I believe we have gobs of story to tell. But I’m not sure we’re going to get around to that one.
Louis-Dreyfus: Oh, my God! It was unbelievable! And that it was Mel Brooks giving the award. That made it so sweet. You can’t beat that!
Hale: Of course, hearing your name was just elation. But the party after was great, just screaming and hugging each other.
Walsh: Except it was a fire-themed party and it was like …
Louis-Dreyfus: … 102 degrees outside. My hair did not hold.
Walsh: You want to stay present in those moments, but it’s hard. It’s like a big wave crashing over you.
Louis-Dreyfus: But that first moment, the one before the wave crashes, that’s the best.