
And, fulfilling a promise that began with Baby Colin’s precocious interest in the work of Stephen Sondheim, this week’s season finale is not only named after a song from Fiddler on the Roof, but that song is performed twice: once by Matt Berry solo and again with the whole cast gathered around the piano.įiddler on the Roof is a time-honored classic at this point, almost as musty and dusty as our core cast of vampires. But on a subtler, more secondary level, this season the show’s writers also came out - as musical-theater fans (not that there’s any overlap between the gay community and musical-theater fandom or anything). First and foremost, of course, was Guillermo finally working up the courage to tell his family that he’s gay in episode seven. And Nandor, faced with his own eternal-life crisis, tries to inject his life with more meaning.In season four, What We Do in the Shadows came out twice.

This season, the vampires are elevated to a new level of power and will encounter the vampire from which all vampires have descended, a tempting Siren, gargoyles, werewolf kickball, Atlantic City casinos, wellness cults, ex-girlfriends, gyms and supernatural curiosities galore.

What We Do in the Shadows, based on the feature film by Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi, returns for its third season, documenting the nightly exploits of vampire roommates Nandor (Kayvan Novak), Laszlo (Matt Berry), Nadja (Natasia Demetriou) and Colin Robinson (Mark Proksch) as they navigate the modern world of Staten Island with the help of their human familiar, Guillermo (Harvey Guillén).Īfter the shocking season two finale, we find the housemates in a panic about what to do with Guillermo after discovering that he is a vampire killer.

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