Seth Rogen used Apple TV+’s Emmy “For Your Consideration” event in Hollywood this week to deliver a very public invitation to three-time Oscar winner Daniel Day-Lewis. “He’s the greatest living actor,” Rogen said, urging the famously selective performer to meet on Zoom so the writers can craft a guest role for him in the second season of The Studio.
Apple ordered another season of the industry-skewering comedy on May 6 after its first ten episodes drew glowing notices and a 93 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes. The show follows fictional studio chief Matt Remick (Rogen) as he balances shareholder pressure with his own cinephile ideals—an angle that has allowed a revolving door of high-profile cameos and insider jokes.
Recent storylines underline why Rogen believes Day-Lewis would fit right in. An episode released earlier this month lampooned Netflix’s awards campaigning, complete with Ted Sarandos playing himself, while another famously used a single, uninterrupted magic-hour shot that required four evenings to capture. The production’s appetite for stunt casting and formal ambition lines up with Day-Lewis’s reputation for total immersion.
Whether the 67-year-old actor is persuadable remains open. Day-Lewis announced his retirement in 2017 after Phantom Thread, issuing a statement that he would “no longer be working as an actor”. Last October, however, NPR reported he had agreed to appear in a feature directed by his son Ronan Day-Lewis, suggesting a willingness to step in front of the camera under special circumstances.
Industry awards strategists say a Day-Lewis cameo could turbo-charge The Studio’s campaign in the crowded comedy categories and reinforce Apple TV+’s push to court talent disenchanted with franchise-driven filmmaking.
For now, Rogen’s pitch hangs in the air while writers room preparations advance, and production dates remain under wraps. Apple declined comment on negotiations, but insiders confirm scripts are being drafted with an unnamed “prestige guest” in mind—just in case the actor who once vanished to learn shoemaking decides Hollywood satire is worth a brief return.