Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

SUCCESSION

- BY MATT ROPER Senior Feature Writer

It is just two years since Brian Cox picked up his best actor Golden Globe for his role in hit drama Succession. And, by his own admission, he’s more famous and well off today than at any point in his impressive 60-year career.

Few in his position – aged 76 and at the peak of his success – would be too worried about the possibilit­y of finding themselves penniless.

But Brian, who overcame a povertystr­icken childhood to become one of the world’s finest stage actors and a Hollywood favourite, admits he has a “constant fear of becoming poor again”.

It’s one of the reasons why the actor – best-known as the foul-mouthed billionair­e media mogul Logan Roy in Sky’s drama – decided to front a documentar­y about society’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with wealth.

How The Other Half Live, which starts tomorrow, is a three-part Channel 5 series in which Brian investigat­es the growing wealth gap across the world, particular­ly in the UK and his adopted home, the United States.

But it is also a deeply personal journey as he goes back to the Dundee home where, aged eight, his shopkeeper dad died from pancreatic cancer at just 51, plunging the family into poverty.

In the series, the actor visit the homes of the super-rich as well as filming moving scenes in soup kitchens and foodbanks. It is even more timely now, as the cost of living crisis pushes millions more into poverty.

Brian says the painful memories of living below the breadline have meant he is both uncomforta­ble with money, and afraid of having it taken away.

“It never leaves you,” he says. “It’s like the Damoclean sword that hangs over you throughout your entire life.

“I never really felt it much when I was young, I was a kid and just got on with it, I was literally surviving. But as I got older I’d look at that boy and think, my God, he survived, how did he do it? And it’s still a mystery to me.”

Describing money as his “own personal demon”, he adds: “After my father died, my mother discovered his bank account had £10 in it. We were destitute. My mother only had a widow’s pension, which would often run out before the end of the week. So I’d go to the fish and chip shop and ask if they had any scraps – the bits of batter at the bottom of the fryer – and take them home for us to eat.

“I had a very happy life until my dad died. He would stand me on the coal bunker and had me doing Al Jolson impersonat­ions. It was my first stage.”

Brian, whose impassione­d rant against then-prime Minister Liz Truss’s policies on BBC’S Question Time last month caused a sensation, believes he inherited his leftleanin­g politics from his dad, whose grocery store was known for looking after the local community by giving them “tick” – or credit.

“My dad was very sweet and kind and a real socialist,” he says.

“Last year, an 80-year-old man came to me and said, ‘I remember your dad very well, I used to go into his shop as a little boy, he was so kind to me and so

I’ve been able to use my voice ... I hope he’d be happy with it BRIAN COX ON HIS FATHER’S LEGACY

caring about what I was going to do with my life.

“I just thought, that’s such a wonderful legacy he left. There was always a conflict with my mother, though.

“She thought he was far too generous, and she was probably right. She would say charity begins at home.”

The youngest of four children, Brian left school aged 14 to earn £4 a week acting at the Dundee Rep.

Aged 17, he left home when he got a grant to study at renowned drama school LAMDA in London. After two years at the Birmingham Rep, he made

 ?? ?? MOVING Brian in How The Other Half Live
MOVING Brian in How The Other Half Live
 ?? ?? EARLY DAYS In crime drama Out, 1978
EARLY DAYS In crime drama Out, 1978
 ?? ?? THE OTHER HALF Brian with wife Nicole
THE OTHER HALF Brian with wife Nicole

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