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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