The Sunday Post (Inverness)

To Russia with love

Actor Brian Cox tells of Scotland’s links

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The Dundee-born actor headed to Russia soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall and just as East- West relations were changing dramatical­ly.

And a BBC documentar­y, Brian Cox’s Russia, takes the Hollywood big- hitter and Margaret back to where they became close.

Brian, 70, says wife Caroline Burt “showed me the red card” and they divorced in 1986.

As his career blossomed with big American movies such as Manhunter, Brian’s personal life was going through “a difficult time” as he faced “a mid- life crisis.”

Margaret says her mum had had enough and her dad was scared he was losing her.

Speaking to The Sunday Post from the New York home he shares with second wife Nicole Ansari and their two sons, Brian admitted: “It was very tricky.

“It’s like a lot of families that split, there are divided loyalties.

“You try to find ways of seeing your children and as an actor it’s doubly difficult as you have to try and weave it into your work.

“I was filming a detective series in Russia called Grushko and I called Margaret, who was 12 then, and got her to come be with me in St Petersburg.

“It was an important time for us to be together. Margaret and I are very similar temperamen­tally and we have a ver y close relationsh­ip.

“I have three sons but she’s my only daughter and, as you can imagine, daddies and daughters are quite an item.”

Margaret not only had time to get close to her dad again but she also fell in love with the city.

Within a few years she was a student at St Petersburg University.

Now a fluent Russian speaker, she is currently back tutoring there.

In the centenary year of the Russian Revolution, the two- part series sees Brian discover the stories of the Scots who both changed and were changed by the country.

He was given inside access to the glorious golden St Andrew Hall, throne room of the Tsars, in the heart of the Kremlin and dedicated to Russia and Scotland’s shared patron saint.

It’s 30 years since Brian had his first real taste of Russia when he was asked to teach at the Moscow Arts Theatre School as glasnost started to take effect.

“I was working at the Royal Shakespear­e Company at the time and I initially went over for two weeks,” said Brian.

“That turned into a year-anda- half of commuting back and forward.

“It was an extraordin­ary time to be there. I hadn’t been to Moscow since the 1990s and the change since has been astonishin­g.

“Back then there was nothing. I remember going to a café and the guy saying to me, ‘Next week, we will have potatoes.’

“And I went to a restaurant where the food was appalling. They

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