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Meet the Cast of ‘Sausage Party: Foodtopia Season 2’

Meet the Cast of 'Sausage Party: Foodtopia Season 2'

Foodtopia is back and boiling over! Season 2 picks up after the explosive events of the 2016 cult film, where sentient groceries escaped human consumption. Frank the sausage, Brenda the bun, Barry the deformed sausage, and Sammy the bagel now face their greatest challenge: building a functional food society from scratch. But utopia is harder than it looks. As simmering tensions between factions threaten to tear Foodtopia apart, a sinister new enemy emerges that could turn their haven into a kitchen nightmare.

Prepare for a feast of chaos when Sausage Party: Foodtopia returns August 13th. This season cranks up the R-rated humor, existential dread, and biting satire as our edible heroes battle internal power struggles, ideological clashes, and the terrifying return of human interference. With creator-driven storytelling and boundary-pushing animation, the series continues to slice through conventions while asking the real question: Can food ever truly be free?

Sausage Party: Foodtopia Season 2 cast members

1. Seth Rogen as Frank

Frank, the bratwurst-turned-idealist leader, faces his toughest challenge yet in Season 2: uniting Foodtopia’s warring factions while Barry’s radical splinter group threatens civil war. His struggle to balance compassion with authority forces gut-wrenching choices that test his “enlightened sausage” philosophy. Rogen’s signature blend of raunchy humor and earnest vulnerability makes Frank the chaotic heart of the series.

Rogen (b. 1982, Vancouver) infuses Frank with the same subversive wit he brought to co-creating the original film. His decades of voice work (Kung Fu Panda, TMNT: Mutant Mayhem) and producing edgy satire (The Boys) ensure Frank’s leadership crisis resonates with both laughs and depth.


2. Edward Norton as Sammy Bagel Jr.

Sammy evolves from neurotic bystander to Foodtopia’s reluctant philosopher-king in Season 2. His debates over “bagel supremacy” versus inclusivity fuel the season’s sharpest satire, while his affair with Dijon (Cotillard) adds spicy romantic chaos. Norton’s delivery—a masterclass in anxious intellectualism—turns grocery politics into existential comedy gold.

Norton (b. 1969, Boston) channels his Moonrise Kingdom wit and Glass Onion precision into Sammy’s cultural rants. His Oscar-nominated intensity (Primal Fear) simmers beneath the character’s Woody Allen-esque panic, making Sammy hilariously profound.


3. Kristen Wiig as Brenda

Brenda transforms from Frank’s supportive bun into a fierce warrior for “baked goods’ rights” this season. Leading a rebel faction against Jill’s toxic influencer cult, Wiig balances slapstick brilliance (a Mad Max-inspired bakery heist) with poignant warmth as Brenda questions her loyalty to Frank.

Wiig (b. 1973, NY) merges her SNL physical genius (Target Lady) and Bridesmaids pathos to make Brenda the soul of Foodtopia. Recent roles in Palm Royale and Wonder Woman 1984 inform her character’s blend of resilience and vulnerability.


4. Michael Cera as Barry

Barry’s trauma from the Great Aisle War ignites a militant revolution against Frank’s leadership. Cera voices his descent from deformed outcast to anarchist icon with haunting subtlety, making Barry’s anti-utopian crusade the season’s most unsettling and relatable arc.

Cera (b. 1988, Ontario) subverts his Arrested Development awkwardness into Barry’s simmering rage. His indie work (Crystal Fairy) and scene-stealing turn as Allan in Barbie (2023) showcase the range he brings to Barry’s tragic complexity.


5. Will Forte as Jack (Tequila Bottle)

Jack becomes Foodtopia’s volatile wildcard, using his “liquid courage” to broker disastrous alliances between warring factions. Forte’s improv genius shines as Jack’s tequila-fueled antics—including a hallucinogenic peace summit—accidentally escalate the food civil war.

Forte (b. 1970, CA) channels MacGruber’s chaotic charm and The Last Man on Earth’s survivor grit into Jack. His vocal elasticity transforms a liquor bottle into the series’ most unpredictably hilarious agitator.


6. Sam Richardson as Julius (Orange)

Julius emerges as Foodtopia’s moral compass, mediating conflicts with citrus-scented optimism. His unlikely friendship with Brenda becomes the emotional anchor of Season 2, culminating in a tear-jerking sacrifice to save her from Jill’s schemes.

Richardson (b. 1984, Detroit) infuses Julius with the same sincere charm that made Veep’s Richard Splett iconic. His chemistry with Wiig elevates their scenes into touching commentary on loyalty in chaos.


7. Patti Harrison as Jill (Douche)

Jill weaponizes influencer culture to seize power, brainwashing “expired” foods into her narcissistic cult. Harrison’s razor-sharp delivery turns Jill into a villainous force—equal parts hilarious and terrifying—as she gaslights Brenda and ignites propaganda wars.

Harrison (b. 1990, OH) draws from her I Think You Should Leave absurdity and Shrill edge to craft Jill’s toxic charisma. Her stand-up background fuels the character’s brutally funny takedowns.


8. Marion Cotillard as Dijon (Mustard)

Dijon becomes Foodtopia’s sly diplomat, using her French “savoir-faire” to broker fragile truces between Frank and Barry. Cotillard’s sultry vocal performance adds sophisticated flair to the raunch, especially in her steamy star-crossed romance with Sammy.

Cotillard (b. 1975, Paris) brings Oscar-winning gravitas (La Vie en Rose) to Dijon’s strategic genius. Her blockbuster experience (Inception) grounds the character’s elegance amid food-pocalypse anarchy.


9. Martin Starr as Sherman (Gum)

Sherman remains Foodtopia’s nihilistic Greek chorus, dispensing deadpan zingers from his sidewalk prison. Starr’s bone-dry delivery steals scenes as Sherman mocks utopian ideals (“We’re all just future plaque”), serving as the show’s bleak conscience.

Starr (b. 1982, CA) channels Silicon Valley’s Gilfoyle and Spider-Man’s Mr. Harrington into Sherman’s resigned wit. His timing makes a chewed gum wad the season’s wisest cynic.


10. Jillian Bell as Trish (Twinkie)

Trish’s sugar-fueled mania reaches new heights as she leads Jill’s “anti-aging” propaganda squad. Bell’s physical comedy genius shines in a Mission: Impossible-style break-in at the human world’s Twinkie factory—a slapstick masterpiece.

Bell (b. 1984, Las Vegas) merges Workaholics chaos with Brittany Runs a Marathon heart to make Trish tragically hilarious. Her hyperactive energy embodies the franchise’s absurd soul.


11. André Sogliuzzo as Chris Bologna / A1 Sauce

Mob boss Chris Bologna returns to exploit Foodtopia’s divisions, while A1 Sauce emerges as a sentient AI villain manipulating Barry’s rebellion. Sogliuzzo’s vocal range shifts from Goodfellas-esque swagger to HAL 9000-level menace.

Sogliuzzo (b. 1966, NYC) leverages Star Wars game villainy (Satele Shan) and The Last of Us grit to craft dual threats. His mafioso growls and digital coldness redefine food antagonists.


12. SungWon Cho (ProZD) as Plum / Apple

Plum’s naive optimism clashes with Apple’s cynical pragmatism as they navigate Gen-Z food trauma. Cho’s viral comedy energy drives a subplot where the twins livestream Foodtopia’s chaos as a “grocery-terror reality show.”

Cho (b. 1987) uses his 5M+ YouTube following and Aggretsuko voice chops to create sibling dynamics bursting with meme-worthy humor. His tonal whiplash between the twins amplifies the season’s satire.

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