Smug Actor Who Assassinated Trump On Stage Learns Brutal Lesson — He’s Not Laughing Now

Smug Actor Who Assassinated Trump On Stage Learns Brutal Lesson — He’s Not Laughing Now

If you look up the word “snowflake” in the dictionary, you might just find a picture of Corey Stoll, the New York Public Theatre actor who played President Donald Trump’s assassin in the group’s sickening rendition of Julius Caesar. After letting his political bias get the best of him, Stoll has learned a brutal lesson, and he’s not laughing any longer — but we sure are.

In an article for Vulture titled “What It Was Like to Star in the Trump-Themed Julius Caesar,” Stoll writes that he “exhaled and sobbed” after the show’s final performance because he was apparently so devastated after becoming “a target of right-wing attacks.”

Corey Stoll, the actor who played the assassin Marcus Brutus in a New York production of Julius Caesar that was repeatedly interrupted by pro-Donald Trump protesters, has written of the fear such actions engendered among a cast left “exhausted and nervous” by the time of the final show, in Central Park last Sunday. [Source: Vessel News]

While Stoll had quite a bit to complain about in his pathetic little essay, he failed entirely to take any responsibility for angering the supporters of the president who turned out night after night to heckle him and his fellow cast members as they repeatedly acted out the bloody assassination of Trump, no doubt reveling in the fantasy. A liberal who refuses to take responsibility for their actions, imagine that!

Stoll is not the only shamelessly progressive New York Public Theatre affiliate to have been dealt a healthy dose of karma over his move to depict the assassination of President Trump, either. The play’s director, Oskar Eustis, has been receiving death threats from American patriots infuriated that he would have the gall to disrespect our Commander-in-Chief in such a way.

Eustis, like Stoll, does not believe that he deserves the backlash which has ensued from the blasphemous version of Julius Caesar. It appears they both suffer from a syndrome common among liberals these days. While they love to dish out vile hatred and intolerance for those with different political opinions, they want to take zero responsibility for the consequences which inevitably result from their shameful actions.

If Corey Stoll truly broke down and sobbed after his final performance as Marcus Brutus, like a Hillary Clinton supporter on election night, he is the definition of a fragile snowflake. I’d suggest that someone ought to take his man card, but he probably lost it long ago.