Scottish Field

RAGS TO RICHES

From the mean streets of Dundee to the glamour of Hollywood, Brian Cox chose the path to acting success at an early age, but the road has had its fair share of bumps, finds Siobhan Synnot

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Dundee's own Brian Cox has had his share of knocks in his acting career

Brian Cox, award-winning Hollywood actor, has the values of his Dundee upbringing printed through him like a stick of rock – and not just because he once asked the city to bestow an honour upon the Dandy’s pigtailed provocateu­r Beryl the Peril. Like Dundee itself, Cox has faced tough breaks and hard knocks. ‘They call it the City of Discovery, but they should call it the City of Survival,’ he once said. ‘It’s about a group of people who’ve been written off more times than I know, and they still go on.’

Cox’s reinventio­n began early when his father Charles, a factory weaver, was sent to register him as Colin. ‘The registrar said: “I don’t like that name,” and my dad said, “I don’t either”. So he renamed me Brian instead.’

The prologue to his 1991 memoir Salem to Moscow describes an adoring relationsh­ip between Cox and his dad, which was shaken to the core when Chic Cox went bankrupt, developed pancreatic cancer and died three weeks after the diagnosis, when Brian was eight.

His mother Mary resented the money her husband’s good nature had cost their business, and forever reminded the youngest of her five children that ‘charity begins at home, Brian’. After Chic’s death, she had a nervous breakdown and was found by her small son with her head in the gas oven. ‘I thought she was cleaning it,’ he said. ‘They gave her electrosho­ck therapy, which destroyed her memory, and she wasn’t even sure of who I was for a while.’

Brian was taken in by his oldest sister, Betty, who was 21, married with two children and a third on the way, in a two room tenement, where a toilet on the stairs was shared with five other families. ‘It was tough for her to take me on. But she did me proud and I’m devoted to her.’

At school he struggled and was put in a stream classified as educationa­lly subnormal. ‘A good bunch of guys but some headbanger­s,’ he recalls. ‘Quite a lot ended up in prison.’ Eventually he taught himself to read by listening to his sister’s gramophone records and matching the songs to the words printed on the label.

Yet he was articulate and would be sent on complex errands into town by the headmaster, often staying away all day.

He also ‘plunked’ school in favour of the cinema for repeat viewings of Giant and Hell on Frisco Bay, once waking up at 4am to find the picturehou­se in darkness and he was locked in.

From an early age he also enjoyed performing, placed on top of the family’s coal bunker by his dad to entertain his cronies with Al Jolson impression­s. ‘People would applaud and laugh and I thought, “this is nice”. So I chose my path from very early on and can’t remember thinking I’d want to be anything else.’

However he might never have trodden the boards without Dundee Rep. After Scotland’s answer to Albert Finney failed his 11-plus, he left school at 15 just as a job opened up shifting sets, mopping floors and bulking out crowd scenes at the local theatre. ‘I had an accent you could cut with a knife, but nobody commented on it. People just made me feel at home. Everybody called each other darling. Backstage you saw half-naked women running around in their underwear, their dressing gowns halfopen. People were so uninhibite­d and I thought it was amazing.’

For the teenager, this was a comforting place full of acceptance until it burnt down on his 17th birthday. By then, however, he’d found the confidence to apply for a place at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art and was accepted. Six years after leaving school, he was on stage in the West End, playing Orlando in As You Like It.

He also fell in love with fellow actress Caroline Burt, who was polished, stable and sensible. They had two children, Margaret and Alan, and while Cox built up a reputation on the London stage at both the RSC and the National Theatre, Caroline held the family and finances together in Fulham.

Despite his love of movies, film acting came relatively late to him. He was 40 when he landed 10 minutes of screentime in a film called Manhunter as the first incarnatio­n of Thomas Harris’ homicidal cannibal Hannibal Lecktor.

Cox based his chilly rationalis­t on Peter Manuel, the Beast of Birkenshaw, who was a serial killer before the term was even invented. When the film’s producer went bust, the film and Cox’s performanc­e were buried – but then rediscover­ed after the success of Silence of the Lambs.

Cox likes to speculate how sick Sir Anthony Hopkins must have become of critics raving about Cox’s clinical Lecktor whenever they’re supposed to be reviewing Hopkins more Grand Guignol Lecter; ‘I only made £10,000 and Tony has made nearly $60m. That’s the only regret I have.’

However, just as things were coming together profession­ally, his 18-year marriage to Caroline was falling apart. ‘It’s sad when you have success and people who have come along with you are not there at the final hurdle, especially when you’ve

“I chose my path from very early on and can’t remember thinking I’d be anything else

both worked so hard for it. Caroline was the first person to believe in me, apart from my family,’ he said. ‘She was a wonderful mother to my kids. I have never quarrelled with her.’

However his son, Alan, who was to become an actor himself, was more public in his complaints, remarking that his father had never been around. He even missed the birth of his first born by ten minutes.

To make money quickly and locally, Cox returned home to the stage in Britain and put Hollywood on hold. He now feels that if Manhunter had become a bigger hit and pulled him into Hollywood, it might have been the worst thing that could have happened. ‘I don’t know if I could have handled it. I had to learn through rejection – and the lesson with Manhunter is that a film like that doesn’t have success locked up.’

Four years later however, with a divorce and two failed relationsh­ips under his belt, he had amassed enough rejection to roll the dice again. Since then he’s been in crowd-pleasers such as The Bourne Identity, Braveheart and Rob Roy, critically acclaimed work including Adaptation and Match Point, and stinkers like Mad About Mambo, Chain Reaction and SuperTroop­ers.

Often he’s cast as the villain, not only because these are meaty roles for a thespian carnivore but because the knifeedge into wrongdoing fascinates him. ‘There is a choice from early on, especially coming from where I come from. You could go one way or another, and breaking the law was a very easy option.’

The money is another influencin­g factor: he’s now a wealthy man with properties in London and Brooklyn, New York but his greatest fear is poverty, making his career a mix of comfortabl­e Hollywood paydays and less fiscally rewarding projects.

Even when Sir Tom Stoppard wrote the lead in Rock’n’Roll with Cox in mind, he accepted the West End stage role in a manner that was half-rueful. ‘Financiall­y this makes no sense,’ he said at the time. ‘We’ll have to have a yard sale when we get back and sell the kids.’

Yet the same fiscal alertness has also made him a patron of many good causes. He funds a scholarshi­p every three years for promising working class actors. During his two terms as rector for Dundee University, where he campaigned via Skype from film locations in Canada, he helped raise funds for the university’s research centre into global diseases including diabetes, which he was diagnosed with several years ago. He blames his poor diet as a child for contractin­g the disease, saying ‘I practicall­y never saw an apple till I was 15’.

Until very recently he was also the figurehead for the Mid-Lin Daycare Centre for the elderly, but was dropped after he told a newspaper that cannabis was ‘wonderful’ and would ‘‘recommend to everyone to get stoned’ because he felt it helped take the edge off today’s politics. ‘Dundee is drugridden, we just can’t support Brian’s views on cannabis,’ said a spokespers­on.

Unlike younger stars, Cox has never been shy about offering views on topics beyond film. He is anti-Brexit, and was one of several prominent Scottish cultural figures who joined the SNP on a platform calling for independen­ce. He is still considerin­g whether to publicly campaign for Scottish independen­ce for a second time. ‘Probably – except maybe I’ll have to keep my mouth shut because people will be saying “what is he daein’, he lives in America”.’

In his defence, Cox points to roles such as his six-year tenure as Dundee rector. ‘I think my track record from my relationsh­ip to Scotland speaks for itself – I’ve done my time as a full Scot.’

Surprising­ly for a self-described lefty republican, Cox accepted a CBE in 2002. At the time he said it would please some of his family. ‘I have a sister who is a royalist and I’ve another sister who’s not.’ His loyal royalist sibling suggested he was due a knighthood too, but Cox felt this was a step too far. ‘I used to make jokes about Sean Connery,’ he joked. ‘I said, “Well, if he becomes president of Scotland, how can he be president Sir Sean Connery?’”

Now he says he even regrets the CBE, telling a podcast earlier this year that he should have ‘thought better’ instead of accepting the honour, especially since he has been a Scottish independen­ce activist, although ‘they are determined to keep

the Queen, so Scotland will never be a proper republic.’

This year Cox also revealed a more intimate brush with royalty, when Princess Margaret visited him backstage when he was 23. ‘I’d just washed my hair so I was sort of glistening. She put her fingers on my shirt, and said, “This is a lovely shirt” and she started to run her fingers down the inside.’

A 2007 biography of actor Alan Bates, who appeared with Cox in the play, recalled that the Queen’s sister had then invited him to ‘dine with her privately at Kensington Palace’ and after Cox refused, Margaret ‘turned her attention to Alan and a similar invitation was forthcomin­g, but he too declined.’

If nothing else, this reminds us how few romantic roles Cox has had in his career, although he did manage to scoop up Helen Mirren and carry her off in the spy caper RED, aged 63. His delight in the scene was palpable, not least because off-mic, a mischievou­s Mirren whispered in his ear: ‘My bloody husband couldn’t do that!’

Off-screen, Cox’s second marriage, to German actress Nicole Ansari, has brought him new happiness, solidity and two teen sons, Orson and Torin. With characteri­stic candour, Cox admits the absence of a father figure in his own childhood has meant he wrestles with parenting. ‘I don’t think I am a bad person, but I’m not one of those hands-on parents,’ he has noted. ‘I’m not discipline­d enough and I’m too soft, too anarchic. And I’ve got a terrible temper. I’ll get very angry, particular­ly with my youngest as he’s a bit of a chancer.

‘I get angry at them taking things for granted in a way. But you can’t damn them because they didn’t have your disadvanta­ges. And my disadvanta­ges turned out to be my advantages. I consider myself lucky to have had them, and they don’t have that struggle.’

As a young man, Cox says he couldn’t wait to leave Dundee, but in later years came to embrace his roots. Every summer he brings his American-based half-German/half-Scots sons to Dundee. ‘I love coming back here and my wife adores Scotland. The only trouble is the weather. It’s the light. I remember being in Glasgow doing Strictly Sinatra and I got depressed. At 11 o’clock in the morning it was already getting dark. If I could take Scotland and put it in South Seas it would be wonderful.’

Last summer, however, he brought not only his family but an American TV crew to Dundee for Succession, the profane HBO saga about the power struggles in a media mogul family in which he plays patriarch Logan Roy.

The role won him Best Actor in a TV Drama at this year’s Golden Globes and he considers himself lucky to have this showcase at his age. ‘I thought my sell-by date had come,’ he admits. ‘I’ve been doing reasonably well, I can’t complain, but a role like Logan Roy comes along once in a generation and you just go “Wow”.’ Even more astonishin­gly, he is now approached by fans who no longer ask for autographs but want him to tell them to get lost in the stentorian manner of Logan, and usually he obliges.

His character was originally supposed to hail from Quebec but Succession’s creators changed it to Dundee. During a break from filming, Cox took his fellow actors on a tour of his old haunts, including the church where his parents were married.

This is not the first crew Cox has brought back to the city; in 2009 he made a BBC documentar­y about the city’s jute trade, and in 2013 he was Broughty Ferry burger king Bob Servant. It gave him a welcome opportunit­y to showcase his long buried Dundee accent in Neil Forsyth’s BBC Scotland comedy series, where the impresario’s political campaign was less about independen­ce, more about offering free fake disability stickers to disgruntle­d car owners on Broughty Ferry’s Brook Street.

However even the Don of Dundee occasional­ly gets pushback. ‘Lorraine Kelly has been pretty worried about it,’ he joked about Dundee’s other durable superstar. ‘She told me she was nervous what the show would do for her back yard.’

My disadvanta­ges turned out to be my advantages. I consider myself lucky to have had them

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 ??  ?? Above right: Cox visits the V&A in Dundee, as the £80.1 million museum officially opened to the public in 2018.
Above right: Cox visits the V&A in Dundee, as the £80.1 million museum officially opened to the public in 2018.
 ??  ?? Above: Brian Cox as the original Hannibal Lecktor in the 1986 film Manhunter.
Above: Brian Cox as the original Hannibal Lecktor in the 1986 film Manhunter.
 ??  ?? Left: Brian Cox with his second wife Nicole Ansari-Cox at the 77th Annual Golden Globe Awards in January 2020 in Beverly Hills, California.
Left: Brian Cox with his second wife Nicole Ansari-Cox at the 77th Annual Golden Globe Awards in January 2020 in Beverly Hills, California.

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