Best Bets: ‘The Lehman Trilogy,’ the Assad Brothers and a Rust-Edelmann recital

Furniture is a popular item and a really good deal at the White Elephant Sale, a benefit for the Oakland Museum of California. (Leslie Katz/Bay City News)

Freebie of the week: If markets are your thing, know that the massive and fun annual White Elephant Sale to benefit the Oakland Museum of California is heading into its final weekend, which means prices will be slashed and the bargains will be plentiful. And of course, the browsing is free.

The sale runs 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the White Elephant Sale Warehouse, 333 Lancaster St., Oakland. More information is at www.whiteelephantsale.org.


From left, Brian Herndon, Peter Hadras and Johnny Moreno star in San Jose Stage’s production of “The Lehman Trilogy.” San Jose Stage via Bay City News.

And they all fall down: Why would anyone in their right minds want to go see a 3½-hour play about a bank? The answer is yes when that bank is the former Lehman Brothers financial company and the play is “The Lehman Trilogy,” now playing at San Jose Stage Company. Stefano Massini’s intensely captivating drama about how the stunning collapse of the 158-year-old financial institution helped bring about the 2008 subprime-mortgage-fueled collapse is way more than a recounting of financial principles and theories.

The 2013 play, which was nominated for eight Tony Awards and won five (including for best play) digs into the three brothers who founded the company and how they were propelled by the American Dream, only to eventually trigger what came close to being the destruction of the global economic order. The play came to American Conservatory Theater in 2024 — fresh off its smash London and Broadway runs — and was the talk of the San Francisco theater scene. San Jose Stage is featuring a different production and a different cast, but it’s the I-can’t-believe-this-happened story line that will keep you glued to your seat past two intermissions.

“The Lehman Trilogy” runs through Sunday at San Jose Stage, 490 S. 1st St., San Jose; tickets are $34-$84; go to thestage.org.


Sérgio and Odair Assad. Opus 3 Artists via Bay City News.

Two for the road’s end? In what the Omni Foundation for the Performing Arts is dubbing “One Last Ride with the Assad Brothers,” Sérgio and Odair Assad will be appearing in recital at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Now in their early 70s and both sporting distinguished, neatly trimmed silver beards, this fabulous classical guitar duo, called “the best two-guitar team in existence” by the Washington Post, has been wowing audiences across the world for six decades.

Hailing from Brazil, where they trained in Rio de Janeiro, elder brother Sérgio now lives in New York, while Odair resides in Brussels — and this tour represents his first trip back to the United States since the end of the pandemic. While no information about the brothers’ recital program was available on the Omni website, works they performed by Sérgio himself, Villa-Lobos and Gismonti at a recent sold-out concert on this tour in Tucson, Arizona, brought the audience to its feet, and the evening there ended with Sérgio wrapping his arms around his brother’s shoulders for a four-hand, single guitar performance. Now, that’s togetherness!

Tickets, $55-$75, are available through omniconcerts.com, and here is a video that demonstrates their prodigious talents: https://youtu.be/DYxTy1Ta-aM?si=7M0UPvIALiABrG_C


Bassoonist Friedrich Edelmann and cellist Rebecca Rust are a married couple and partners as a recitalist duo; they appear in Walnut Creek on Saturday. Uwe Seyl via Bay City News.

An unusual pairing: Another unique duo is scheduled to entertain us in the Bay Area this weekend, this time at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Walnut Creek, where married couple Rebecca Rust, a cellist, and Friedrich Edelmann, a bassoonist, have a program planned for a 7 p.m. recital.

The American wife and her German husband (formerly the principal bassoonist at the Munich Philharmonic) have performed together all over the world, including appearances in France, Germany, the Czech Republic, Scotland, North Africa, China and Japan, in addition to the United States. Their repertoire extends from the Baroque to the Classical as well as ethnocentric works from Japan and Jewish Hassidic melodies. Their Saturday program consists of works by Couperin, Boccherini, Bach, Haydn, three Hassidic duets composed for them by Max Stern, Beethoven, Sher and two Japanese melodies, concluding with a rousing ragtime by Arthur Frackenpohl.

The suggested donation is $20, or $10 for students, but as is usual with the St. Paul’s series, no one will be turned away for lack of funds. Find information, tickets and a link to an online performance at stpaulswc.org/concert-series.


An earlier edition of this post appeared first on Local News Matters.

Leave a Reply

The Exedra comments section is an essential part of the site. The goal of our comments policy is to help ensure it is a vibrant yet civil space. To participate, we ask that Exedra commenters please provide a first and last name. Please note that comments expressing congratulations or condolences may be published without full names. (View our full Comments Policy.)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *