Who plays lenny bruce

THE PERFORMER | Luke Kirby

THE SHOW | The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

THE EPISODE | “How Do You Get to Carnegie Hall?” (March 10, 2022)

THE PERFORMANCE | One can only imagine how much pressure Kirby felt after reading Amy Sherman-Palladino’s script for the Season 4 finale. Among the Herculean tasks put in front of the actor: Charm the literal pants (or, in this case, the “show corset”) off of the series’ titular heroine and provide a satisfying payoff to the couple’s four-season will-they-or-won’t-they dance in the process; pay homage to his late, real-life alter ego Lenny Bruce’s seminal 1961 performance at Carnegie Hall; and light a fire in Midge that puts her, presumably, on a path to superstardom ahead of the series’ fifth and final season.

After watching the standout hour, we can enthusiastically place a check mark in each of the three columns.

Let’s start with the sex. Midge and Lenny’s long-anticipated copulation proved well worth the wait, in large part due to Kirby masterfully blending good old-fashioned chivalry with raw, primal horniness. From the devastatingly sexy way he seduced Midge from across the room with just his eyes to his sheepish insistence that he “did not plan” their impromptu blizzard-induced rendezvous, Kirby’s Lenny alternated between sweet/playful and smoldering/seductive.

When Lenny paused, leaned in and informed Midge that she was “more important than God” — a nod to her recent, surprisingly weighty standup set about death and spirituality — Kirby delivered the cheeky line as if it were a breathtaking declaration of love. Which, of course, it was. And when he flashed his trademark devilish grin and innocently confessed, “Midge: I gotta see the show corset,” the Emmy winner put the most romantic of spins on what was essentially a shameless plea for coitus.

Later, when Lenny hit the stage at Carnegie Hall, Kirby confidently put on his “Lenny Bruce: Iconic Comedian” and delivered a rousing set (or at least the highlights of one) that felt both fresh and reverential. But it was the come-to-Jesus career talk Lenny had with Midge after the show that brought us to our feet. As he got deeper into his lecture, Kirby allowed us to see the vulnerability underneath his character’s frustration. “If you blow this, Midge,” Lenny bellowed through tears, “you will break my f–king heart.”

If Kirby’s final assignment was to shatter our tickers, it was another mission masterfully accomplished.

Who plays lenny bruce
HONORABLE MENTION | Jamie Dornan‘s amnesiac alter ego, known simply as The Man, left viewers guessing throughout HBO Max’s six-episode mystery/thriller The Tourist, and the actor did a remarkable job threading the moral ambiguity needle every step of the way. That was especially the case in the finale, which found his titular antihero coming to grips with the horrifying realization that he was (or is?) a very bad Man. As one of his victims rattled off a laundry list of his characters’ most stomach-churning atrocities, Dorman’s eyes oozed denial and regret and shame, as he protested through tears, “No… no. This can’t be true.” The Once Upon a Time vet’s perfectly calibrated work in that scene capped off what was, all told, a career-best performance.

Who plays lenny bruce
HONORABLE MENTION | This week’s This Is Us was a full-on masterclass given by Mandy Moore, and we were riveted. Moore as newly engaged Rebecca nervously preparing her first Thanksgiving meal? Flawless. Moore as elderly Rebecca softly, but firmly, laying out her wishes for her end-of-life care? Heartbreaking, but perfect. The Emmy nominee is so very good at changing Rebecca just enough to reflect the life that’s passed between timelines, yet keeping the core of the character exactly the same, no matter the era. The control Moore exhibited as Rebecca fought to hold it together in that meeting at the cabin was perhaps the actress’ most impressive turn during the hour. After all these seasons, maybe we should be used to it, but still, we marvel.

Who plays lenny bruce
HONORABLE MENTION | The term “serious as a heart attack” was taken to the next level on Monday’s 9-1-1: Lone Star, and Brian Michael Smith was more than up to the challenge. Even with the dramatic foreshadowing of Paul’s near-fatal incident, Smith took us by complete surprise with the haunting authenticity of his performance. Heck, if Marjan didn’t kick down his door to rescue him, we were about to. Paul’s subsequent cocktail of fear, disbelief and anger upon having his pacemaker installed against his will was a doozy, and Smith mixed it perfectly. We never thought we’d look forward to a character’s pain, but if the rest of Paul’s current journey is as satisfying as what’s already come to pass, we’re all in.

Which performance(s) knocked your socks off this week? Tell us in Comments!

Lenny Bruce once said, "I'm not a comedian. I'm Lenny Bruce." For him, there was no way to tell where the comic ended and Lenny Bruce began. Being a comedian wasn't so much a job, but a way of existing. What he said, and when he said it, made Lenny Bruce a voice of a generation, despite his troubled personal life.

It would take a deeply complicated actor to portray one of comedy's most layered and thoughtful performers. And don't forget funny, because Lenny was hilarious. So, who plays Lenny Bruce on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel?

TORONTO - It’s quite a leap to watch actor Luke Kirby go from playing a Gucci-clad dreamy dad in Crave’s “Gossip Girl” to the dark comedian and satirist he plays in Prime Video’s “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” who’d probably have more than a few punchlines reserved for the former.

But the Hamilton-born Kirby has a knack for slipping in and out of each character, whose New York roots grant them a similar slickness.

The 43-year-old says he often had to hop between sets while filming the inaugural season of “Gossip Girl” and the penultimate fourth season of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” which premieres Friday, long delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Listen, in terms of bringing Lenny Bruce to ‘Gossip Girl,’ they said no to the trench coat, they said no to the cigarettes, and they said no to the profanity,” Kirby says from Los Angeles, echoing the real-life, late comedian’s sly wit.

“So I had to find something else to do.”

Fortunately, he still found his way back to Lenny — again and again.

After appearing in the pilot, Kirby assumed that would be it but creator Amy Sherman-Palladino of “Gilmore Girls” just kept writing him back in, and he earned an Emmy Award in 2019.

When he meets Rachel Brosnahan’s Midge Maisel in the first season, Lenny inadvertently inspires the housewife to pursue a comedy career in 1950s New York City, despite also warning her it’s a terrible business, comparing it to “cancer and God.”

“I thought this character was going to give her a few pointers, tell her his gripes with life and comedy, and then disappear into the fog,” Kirby says.

“It’s been really fun to wait for the phone to ring and see what they’ve drummed up, because it’s always exciting to be with Rachel. It was so great to see that they saw something between these two people that was worth exploring more.”

Each time the pair run into each other, Lenny passes off a few silly words of wisdom, helping Midge remember what she wants and how to fight for it.

Such was especially the case in the third season when the two shared a dance and nearly a kiss. Their chemistry is more palpable than ever and for once, both note, neither could summon a joke.

Brosnahan says she’s loved building the will they/won’t they dynamic with Kirby and watching their relationship unfold.

“He is one of the only actors on the show who is allowed to come on to set and change the pace of the show,” she says of Kirby’s influence.

“When he comes on, we’re allowed to take a deep breath. I think that’s part of what audiences respond to, there’s suddenly a totally different energy in the show.

“It lets us find different colours in that relationship that we don’t always have the space and time to do. The relationship is as special to me as it is to Midge.

“He is, at least on the surface, the kind of comic that she aspires to be — someone who uses his voice exactly how he wants to use it all the time regardless of the consequences.”

The fourth season is set in 1960, four years before the real Bruce was charged and convicted of obscenity for his act.

In retracing those legendary footsteps, Kirby hints that the series could take a necessarily tragic turn, as the real-life comedian died at just 40 years old in 1966, due to an accidental morphine overdose.

“I’ve always admired and been curious about Lenny. One of the lucky strokes about doing this show is that we’re not exploring the historical Lenny Bruce from a chronological perspective,” says Kirby.

“He’s a little more malleable here, but we are trying to honour who he was.”

The last time we saw them together, Lenny asks Midge when they might give in to their romantic spark: “Maybe someday? Before I’m dead?”

Kirby confirms there was more to that joke, noting he and the creators do feel a responsibility to acknowledge how the real-life comedian died.

“This season, you will see touches of that because it’s always been a presence in the back of my mind and in playing him,” he says.

“Now it’s time to show gravity take hold over his life a little bit, because as nice as it is for him to exist in this magical realm, you can only rewrite history so much before it starts to feel kind of irresponsible.”

Midge, too, starts to see Lenny a little differently, Brosnahan teases.

“Midge begins to dig a little deeper and realize that her fantasy of him that she created in her head isn’t necessarily exactly who he is or how he moves through the world.”

Kirby says that doesn’t mean the pair won’t at least have another “magical” moment or two, musing also on what it would be like if they were ever to share a stage.

“When relationships are brimming with magnetism, connectivity and chemistry, it really does leave a lot open to what the potential is,” he says.

“There could be earthquakes, there could be crickets, anything can happen. Personally, I think that they would make a great doubleheader.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 17, 2022.