The Heart, She Holler
Appearance
The Heart, She Holler | |
---|---|
Created by | Vernon Chatman John Lee |
Starring | Patton Oswalt Amy Sedaris |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 28 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Running time | 11 minutes |
Production companies | PFFR Williams Street Warner Bros. Television |
Original release | |
Network | Adult Swim |
Release | November 6, 2011 – December 11, 2014 |
The Heart, She Holler is an American comedy television series created by Vernon Chatman and John Lee for Adult Swim.[1] The show premiered on November 6, 2011 for a six-episode first season. A 14-episode second season premiered on September 11, 2013, and a third season premiered in December 2014.
Plot
The series, described as "Southern Gothic drama"[2] and "an inside-out blend of soap opera and politically incorrect surrealist comedy",[3] is about the long-hidden and isolated son of the Heartshe dynasty (Patton Oswalt) returning to run the town and being locked in conflict with sisters Hurshe (Kristen Schaal and Amy Sedaris) and Hambrosia (Heather Lawless).
Characters
The Heartshe family
- Hurlan Heartshe (Patton Oswalt) – Secret son of Hoss Heartshe, hidden away "since the minute he was born" in a cave, where he lived for 40 years without any human contact, nor ever seeing the light of day, until he is brought out to run the town of Heartshe Holler. Of his character, Oswalt said "I thought of Kaspar Hauser. That was my model – lethally nonjudgmental of the world to himself, that he trusts everything's going to be awesome."[4]
- Hurshe Heartshe (Kristen Schaal – season 1; Amy Sedaris – season 2-3) – Psychotic, vindictive, oversexed sister to Hurlan and Hambrosia. Endlessly plotting to take over the town from Hurlan. It is established in Season 2 that Hurshe was actually married, but her husband is in jail; they had a son and a daughter but she didn't bother naming them and keeps them in a secret compartment under her bed, echoing the childhood of their uncle Hurlan.
- Hambrosia Heartshe (Heather Lawless) – Hurlan's other sister, who possesses telekinetic and mind-reading powers. She is also trying to take over the town and/or kill her sister. Very religious and married to the town sheriff, she was "born without lady parts", although she carries on an affair with severed ectoplasmic hands.
- Sheriff (Joseph Sikora – season 1-2; Scott Adsit – season 3) – The corrupt, generally incompetent sheriff of Heartshe Holler, he is married to Hambrosia and in love with her sister Hurshe after seeing her hang herself.
- "Boss" Hoss Heartshe (Jonathan Hadary) – The leader, founder, and owner of the Town of Heartshe Holler who died at the beginning of the series after working tirelessly on his extensive video will in which he leaves Hurlan his fortune and full control of the Holler. He appears in every episode through this video will, which he uses to teach and guide Hurlan. He is resurrected in the last episode of the first season when his corpse and living will are posthumously sentenced to "re-death" in the electric chair.
- "Meemaw" Virginia Dare (Judith Anna Roberts) The matriarch of Heartshe Holler, and the bearer of the curse of Heartshe, being unable to die – though Boss Hoss reveals at the end of Season 1 that the real secret curse is that she can die, through unspecified means, and if she does it will result in the destruction of Heartshe Holler. It is explained in Season 2 that most if not all of the bizarre incidents which occur in the Holler are due to Meemaw's psychic control, which she uses to play twisted games with the inhabitants of the town for her own amusement. For example, Hurshe's affair with her own sister's husband was largely encouraged by Meemaw's psychic influence. Hambrosia may have inherited her psychic powers from Meemaw, but it is unclear which of them is stronger. In the Season 2 finale Meemaw's real name is first given as "Virginia Dare", and in Season 3 it is confirmed that she is the actual Virginia Dare, "the first white person born on this continent". Her birth so offended the gods of the indigenous peoples that she was cursed.
Townsfolk
- "Doc" (Kevin Breznahan) – The town's doctor, formerly an auto mechanic. He's also quite a skilled plumber.
- The Reverend (Leo Fitzpatrick) – The immoral and cowardly religious leader of the town. Formerly a criminal named "Psycho Mike"
- Cutter (Michael Laurence) – A sleazy handyman who was Boss Hoss's right-hand man and enforcer. He did the dirty work of reining in anyone who challenged Hoss's control of the town. In his video will, Hoss says that over the years he came to think of Cutter as the son he never had – only to then bluntly denounce that Cutter is not of course his son, and therefore he doesn't need to give him any inheritance, leaving Cutter emotionally devastated. Cutter also occasionally has flashbacks about all of the victims he killed.
- Jacket (David Cross) – an overweight redneck who always wears shirts bearing the Confederate flag. He runs the bar section of the town's combined bar/convenience store, along with his wife Direne. Jacket and Direne first appear in Season 2. By Season 3, he stars in his own local access TV talk show, Wake Up White People.
- Direne (Jennifer Regan) Jacket's wife, who runs the front convenience store section of the town's combined bar/convenience store.
Episodes
This section needs an improved plot summary. (December 2015) |
Series overview
Season | Episodes | Originally aired | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | |||
1 | 6 | November 6, 2011 | November 11, 2011 | |
2 | 14 | September 10, 2013 | September 27, 2013 | |
3 | 8 | December 2, 2014 | December 11, 2014 |
Season 1 (2011)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | US viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "And So It Begends" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 6, 2011 | 1.18[5] |
2 | 2 | "No, Jojo, No!" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 7, 2011 | 1.32[6] |
3 | 3 | "Holy Meemaw" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 8, 2011 | 1.25[7] |
4 | 4 | "Fear is Dog Spelled Bassackwards" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 9, 2011 | N/A |
5 | 5 | "Death Begins at Conception" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 10, 2011 | N/A |
6 | 6 | "Dare to Holler" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | November 11, 2011 | N/A |
Season 2 (2013)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | US viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | 1 | "Begend the Endginning" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 10, 2013 | 1.04[8] | |
Hurlan passes back into the cave from whence he came – only to wander into an alternate reality where the events of the Season 1 finale never occurred. | |||||||
8 | 2 | "Proper Dental Care Is Murder" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 11, 2013 | 1.17[9] | |
9 | 3 | "The Blue Lonegoon" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 12, 2013 | 1.13[8] | |
The Preacher delivers fire and brimstone sermons that consumption of meat is evil, because it leads to homosexual behavior. The new ban is hypocritical, as the Preacher himself continues to eat meat in private. Hurlan is attracted by the smell but the Preacher deflects attention from himself by insisting that Hurlan's soul is in danger if he continues to want meat. The Preacher takes him on a weekend prayer retreat in the woods to Camp Praythegayaway, but he soon becomes lost. Awakening, Hurlan is convinced that his desire to eat meat actually did result in some sort of homosexual-orgy-apocalypse, which destroyed human civilization. Hurlan therefore settles into the camp and attempts to rebuild civilization from scratch. Meanwhile, with Hurlan missing, Boss Hoss's video will instructs that Hambrosia will lead the town in his absence. Finally in charge, she decides to "cut loose" by listening to vinyl records and taking a bite of tobacco chaw – which nearly kills her. Hambrosia subsequently bans all forms of tobacco from town, and goes door to door with a shotgun in hand to make sure the ban is in effect. However, Hurshe one-ups her sister by making her own smoke-easy in the local bar. Hurshe makes up her own phoney religion of "Chawstafarianism" and claims the legal loophole that chaw is her religion's "sacred herb" and thus cannot be regulated. The two sisters find themselves at loggerheads. | |||||||
10 | 4 | "The Telltale Butthole" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 13, 2013 | 1.21[10] | |
Hurshe's estranged husband, formerly one of the most feared and terrible men in the Holler, is released from prison and returns to town. This further complicates the affair between Hurshe and the Sheriff. The Preacher is upset as well, because before he joined the Church he used to be a drug mule for Hurshe's husband. Meanwhile, Hambrosia is once again upset that she was "born without lady parts", until she is told that the Doctor can surgically give her some. Hurshe's husband decides to get revenge by having sex with Hambrosia – by making the Preacher have sex with her. Note: Hurlan does not appear in this episode. | |||||||
11 | 5 | "Mu-Mu-Mu-Meat" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 16, 2013 | N/A | |
12 | 6 | "Pequiem for a Recker" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 17, 2013 | 1.25[11] | |
13 | 7 | "Emotional Can of Mommyworms" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 18, 2013 | 1.26[12] | |
14 | 8 | "The DeArranged Marriage" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 19, 2013 | N/A | |
15 | 9 | "Werelan" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 20, 2013 | 1.33[13] | |
16 | 10 | "Come Unity" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 23, 2013 | 1.19[14] | |
A mysterious man appears in town. | |||||||
17 | 11 | "Hambrain Jan" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 24, 2013 | 1.23[15] | |
Hambrosia's brain escapes to find Hurlan, who mistakes it for a Mexican. The brain cleans his room but ultimately causes a wind storm with destruction to the city. Without the torment of her psychic brain, Hambrosia becomes a laid back, free-spirited hippie, constantly trying to share non-sensical poetry with everyone. He sends the brain away, who returns to Hambrosia. | |||||||
18 | 12 | "Preverse Psychologism" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 25, 2013 | 1.12[16] | |
19 | 13 | "Gamebored" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 26, 2013 | 1.05[17] | |
Feeling lonely, Hurlan takes to using an old typewriter, and actually writes a book-length manuscript. He soon becomes a Truman Capote-esque novelist, respected by the town as their first and only literary great. Meanwhile, it is revealed that by manipulating cloth dolls of them on a chessboard, Meemaw psychically influences the townsfolk for her own twisted games. Many of the bizarre occurrences, rivalries, and love triangles in the town were really created by Meemaw for her own petty amusement, such as Hurshe having an affair with the husband of her own sister. When Hambrosia learns of this she becomes outraged that Meemaw is forcing the town's inhabitants to commit negative, sinful acts which they aren't actually responsible for. She attempts to round up everyone into the church to pray away Meemaw's influence, but to no avail, as Meemaw psychically hijacks the meeting. However, Boss Hoss' video will reveals to Hurlan that there is one cloth doll Meemaw doesn't know about, which he hid under his hat: a doll of Meemaw herself. Hurlan uses the doll to control Meemaw and force her to relinquish her gameboard to him, to set the townsfolk free. | |||||||
20 | 14 | "The Endginning" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | September 27, 2013 | 1.18[18] |
Season 3 (2014)
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | US viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | 1 | "In Meatro" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 2, 2014 | 1.069 | |
22 | 2 | "WUWPs" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 3, 2014 | 1.138 | |
23 | 3 | "Klansgender Rights" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 4, 2014 | 1.263 | |
24 | 4 | "Groaning Amore" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 5, 2014 | 0.961 | |
25 | 5 | "Oralboros" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 6, 2014 | 1.159 | |
26 | 6 | "Slaughter Me to Heaven" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 9, 2014 | 1.035 | |
27 | 7 | "Congroined Hearts" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 10, 2014 | 1.051 | |
28 | 8 | "The Comening" | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | Vernon Chatman & John Lee | December 11, 2014 | 1.258 | |
This episode about redneck hell and true identity of Hoss from another dimension. It is The Comening. |
References
- ^ TV-PG (August 22, 2010). "Press Releases – Adult Swim Video". Video.adultswim.com. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
- ^ Parsons, Dan (October 28, 2011). "Patton Oswalt & The Heart, She Holler: New York Comic Con 2011 Podcast". cinefantastiqueonline.com. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
- ^ Jenny (November 4, 2011). "The Heart, She Holler: The Surrealist Yokel Masterpiece You NEED to See". xojane.com. Retrieved November 8, 2011.
- ^ Gonzales, Ian (November 7, 2011). "The Holler's Screaming All The Time". www.unwinnable.com. Retrieved November 11, 2011.
- ^ Seidman, Robert (November 8, 2011). "Monday Cable Ratings: Bears-Eagles, ' WWE RAW, 'Basketball Wives' and 'Housewives of Beverly Hills' Lead Night & More". Zap2it. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
- ^ Seidman, Robert (November 9, 2011). "Tuesday Cable Ratings: 'Sons of Anarchy' Tops Night + 'Tosh.0,' 'Covert Affairs' Go Lower + Workaholics & More". Zap2it. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
- ^ Seidman, Robert (November 10, 2011). "Wednesday Cable Ratings: 'American Horror Story,' 'South Park' Lead; 'Psych' Lower + 'Real World,' 'Mythbusters' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
- ^ a b Pucci, Douglas (September 17, 2013). "Adult Swim Weekly Ratings Scorecard". TV Media Insights. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 12, 2013). "Wednesday Cable Ratings: 'Duck Dynasty' Wins Night + 'Modern Dads', 'Here Comes Honey Boo Boo', 'Royal Pains', 'The Challenge: Rivals II' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
- ^ Bibel, Sara. "Friday Cable Ratings: 'WWE Smackdown' Wins Night, 'Legend of Korra', 'Jessie', 'What Not to Wear', 'Fast N Loud' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (September 19, 2013). "Tuesday Cable Ratings: 'Sons of Anarchy' Wins Night, 'Tosh.0', 'Suits', 'Amish Mafia', 'Face Off' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (September 19, 2013). "Wednesday Cable Ratings: 'Duck Dynasty' Wins Night, 'Bad Ink', 'Key & Peele', 'The Challenge', 'For Better or Worse' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved September 20, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda. "Friday Cable Ratings: 'Friday Night SmackDown' Wins Night + 'SportsCenter', College Football, 'The Legend of Korra' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 24, 2013). "Monday Cable Ratings: 'Monday Night Football' Wins Night + 'Monday Night RAW', 'Teen Mom III', 'Basketball Wives' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 25, 2013). "Tuesday Cable Ratings: 'Sons of Anarchy' Wins Night + 'Tosh.0', 'Amish Mafia', 'The Daily Show', 'Brickleberry', 'Ink Master' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 26, 2013). "Wednesday Cable Ratings: 'South Park' Wins Night + 'The Challenge: Rivals II', 'Key & Peele', 'The Daily Show', 'The Colbert Report' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (September 27, 2013). "Thursday Cable Ratings: 'Thursday Night Football' Leads the Pack + College Football, 'Project Runway', 'The Daily Show' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (October 1, 2013). "Friday Cable Ratings:'WWE Smackdown' Wins Night, 'Legend of Korra', 'Haven', College Football, 'Deadly Women' & More". Zap2it. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
External links
Categories:
- 2010s American surreal comedy television series
- 2011 American television series debuts
- 2014 American television series endings
- Adult Swim original programming
- English-language television shows
- Gothic television shows
- Southern United States in fiction
- Television series about dysfunctional families
- Television series by PFFR
- Television series by Williams Street
- Television shows set in the United States