Yes yes, I realize The Lehman Trilogy is a Tony-award winning play with Oscar & Tony-Award winning director Sam Mendes bringing it to the West End but…you mean to tell me…we might get multiple hours of Hadley in a tailored suit??? 🫣😵💫🥺🥵
“The three actors not only play the three Lehman brothers who founded the business but all other roles. They play their children and grandchildren, including Philip Lehman (son of Emanuel, played by Simon Russell Beale), Herbert Lehman (son of Mayer, played by Ben Miles), and Robert Lehman (son of Philip, played by Adam Godley), as well as various minor characters[20] during the unfolding of family history such as wives, toddlers, and business partners, although they never change the original costume – tailored three-piece suits often seen in 19th-century portraits of men.”
Toronto's Canadian Stage Announces Their 2023.24 Season
#frontmezzjunkies reports:
@canadianstage announces a sweeping 2023.24 season
"staging internationally acclaimed and award-winning plays from Canada and around the world, in the heart of Toronto"
#TheaTO #TorontoTheatre
#CanadianStage #CanadianTheatre
Stephen Jackman-Torkoff. Photo by Lorne Bridgman.
Canadian Stage announces a sweeping 23.24 season.
For Canadian Stage‘s 2023.34 season, the company is proud to announce that they will be staging internationally acclaimed and award-winning plays from Canada and around the world, in the heart of Toronto. And frontmezzjunkies is certainly excited to see it all.
Revival of Pulitzer Prize-winning…
It’s All in the Family in Huntington’s Spectacular ‘The Lehman Trilogy’
Joshua David Robinson, Firdous Bamji, and Steven Skybell in ‘The Lehman Trilogy’ at the Huntington. Photos by T. Charles Erickson
By Shelley A. Sackett
A lone and mournful clarinetist (Joe LaRocca) wanders across the stage of the Huntington’s theatrically astonishing “The Lehman Trilogy,” inviting comparisons in tone and content to the spirited drama “Fiddler on the Roof.” Steeped in ritual and…
“It’s really easy to look at these institutions like banks and ignore the fact that they’re made up of humans; all of the things you’re hearing on the news cycle — the markets and all of that stuff. A bank is made up of people, and it becomes non-human the bigger it gets, and when it falls apart, the collateral becomes human. For me, that’s what I found so moving,” Fraser told us.