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The Last Tycoon (TV series)
American television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Last Tycoon is an American television series, originating from a pilot produced in 2016 as part of Amazon Studios' seventh pilot season. The show stars Matt Bomer and Kelsey Grammer and is loosely based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's last book, the unfinished and posthumously published 1941 novel The Last Tycoon. Amazon picked up the pilot to series on July 27, 2016.[1] The first season premiered on July 28, 2017.[2] On September 9, 2017, Amazon cancelled the series.[3]
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Premise
Based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's last book The Last Tycoon (published posthumously), the show takes place in 1936 Hollywood. Monroe Stahr, loosely based on the producer Irving Thalberg, battles his boss Pat Brady.
Cast
Main
- Matt Bomer as Monroe Stahr (née Milton Sternberg), a movie producer with a terminal heart condition, working under a false name to hide his Jewish ancestry
- Kelsey Grammer as Pat Brady, head of Brady American, a hollywood picture studio
- Lily Collins as Cecelia Brady, Pat's daughter, romantically insterested in Monroe
- Dominique McElligott as Kathleen Moore, a waitress and Monroe's new girlfriend
- Enzo Cilenti as Aubrey Hackett (née Enzo Resteghini), a cynical writer working for Monroe
- Koen De Bouw as Tomas Szep,[4] a German covert assistant of Pat Brady
- Mark O'Brien as Max Miner, a poor man from Oklahoma, discreetly working for Pat Brady
- Rosemarie DeWitt as Rose Brady, Pat's wife, having an affair with Monroe
Recurring
- Vince Nappo as Landon Aames, a novelist turned screenwriter, often in over his head
- Bailey Noble as Bess Burrows, Pat Brady's mistress
- Whitney Rice as Mary Greer, Monroe's secretary
- Kerry O'Malley as Kay Maloney, another of Monroe's screenwriting team
- Saul Rubinek as Louis B. Mayer
- Iddo Goldberg as Fritz Lang, a German émigré, directing the "An Enemy Among Us" picture for Monroe
- Danielle Rose Russell as Darla Miner, Max Miner's younger sister, dreams of becoming an actor
- Annika Marks as Bernadette Davis, a recently widowed screenwriter
- Jennifer Beals as Margo Taft, actress, an uncompromising movie star Brady American needs
- Jessica De Gouw as Minna Davis, actress, Monroe's deceased wife
- Michael Siberry as Georg Gyssling, German consul
- Melia Kreiling as Hannah Taub, a German musician fleeing the Nazis
Guest stars
- Seth Fisher as Irving Thalberg ("More Stars Than There Are in Heaven")
- Larry Cedar as Dr. Harold Grife ("More Stars Than There Are in Heaven")
- Stefanie von Pfetten as Marlene Dietrich ("Burying the Boy Genius")
- Rob Brownstein as Jack Warner ("Eine Kleine Reichmusik")
- Hailee Steinfeld as Samia Barch
- Nick Lehane as Frank Capra ("An Enemy Among Us")
- Joshua Weinstein as George Cukor ("An Enemy Among Us")
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Episodes
Reception
Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave the show a score of 45% based on 42 reviews, with an average rating of 5.4/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "This old-fashioned tour through F. Scott Fitzgerald's vision of Hollywood has lush production values and an attractive varnish of glamorous pedigree, but lacks a storytelling hook or a compelling character to latch onto - resulting in an inert bauble that is pleasing to look at but elusive to feel."[5] On Metacritic, the show holds a weighted average score of 57 out of 100 based on 30 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[6]
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References
External links
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