INDUSTRY Goes for Broke
New York magazine|June 03 - 15, 2024
With a new Sunday-night time slot and Game of Thrones's Kit Harington co-starring, can this buzzy GEN-Z FINANCE DRAMA finally break out?
JACKSON MCHENRY
INDUSTRY Goes for Broke

NESTLED IN THE rolling hills of South West England, among picturesque towns with country cottages that sell for millions of pounds, there's a 16th-century private estate known as Longleat House. The country seat of the Marquess of Bath, it is also, for a few days in late summer 2023, the filming location for a sex-and-drug-addled TV show about misbehaving investment bankers. Bedecked with antique furniture and genealogical tapestries, the home is a significant change of place for a clique of self-destructive 20-something co-workers more often surrounded by the glass-and-fluorescent despair of their highly competitive London offices. Don't worry: They still find a way to do coke there.

At the end of Industry's third season-a level up for the series in terms of scale, writing, and general shenanigans-a few of its characters end up at this monument to old money for a dinner party. There are two familiar faces present in this scene, both wearing black tie: Harry Lawtey, who plays Industry's woebegone working-class striver, Robert, whose boys'-club looks fine cheekbones, a winning curl of hair Industry's makeup designer, Mirna Curak, tells me she is personally very protective of-allow him to fit into the banking world, and Marisa Abela, who plays Yasmin KaraHanani, a British Lebanese heiress who is as good at social manipulation as she is bad at her actual job.

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