The Scotsman

Hollywood star reveals his fear of radical right and the ‘Pink Pinocchio’ president

- By BRIAN FERGUSON bferguson@scotsman.com

Brian Cox, the Scottish actor famous for playing hard-men characters and the first Hannibal Lecter, has admitted he is frightened by the surge in popularity of right-wing politics in Britain and America.

Speaking ahead of filming in Scotland of the HBO series Succession, in which he plays an American media mogul, the Us-based actor Cox branded Donald Trump “The Pink Pinocchio” president.

But Cox, 72, also cited a “zeitgeist of dissatisfa­ction” for the rise of right-wing politician­s, which he said had placed both countries in “peril.”

Cox, one of the most highprofil­e backers of Scottish independen­ce, praised Nico - la Sturgeon as a “straight honest women” but suggested the SNP had been experienci­ng problems building support for independen­ce due to the UK’S “crazy” political climate.

In an in-conversati­on event at Dundee Rep theatre, where Cox worked from the age of 14, he revealed he wanted to make a film on Dundee’s forgotten cinema star, William Duncan, one of the highest-paid actors in Hollywood’s silent era.

Cox said that two episodes of Succession, in which he plays Logan Roy, the Scotsborn head of a dysfunctio­nal family, will be shot in the next few weeks, in Glasgow and his native Dundee, where his character is also from.

However Cox joked with the audience at Dundee Rep that he would be urging the writers on the show to alter the script for the forthcomin­g episodes as his character is so disparagin­g about his home city, where Cox was born in 1946.

Cox recalled his“tragic” childhood, which saw his mother suffer a nervous breakdown after the death of his father when he was just eight.

He won a place at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, before spells with the Royal Lyceum in Edinburgh, Birmingham Rep, the Royal Shakespear­e Compa - ny and the National Theatre.

Cox made his movie breakthrou­gh as Lecter in Michael Mann’s Man hunter in 1986 and went onto star in Brave heart and Rob Roy. But he did not relocate to the US until the mid-1990s, starring in The Long Kiss Goodnight, The Bourne Identity, X-men 2, Adaptation and Troy.

Asked about his latest political views, Cox said :“My Scottish ness is very who I am. There never used to be any nationalis­m in me. I have come to believe in Scottish independen­ce. I was very much the opposite before.

“As the UK gets crazier and crazier, I’m looking for some sensibilit­y and getting back to some values of community, which have kind of gone out of our politics altogether. The one thing about Nicola Sturgeon is she is a straight honest woman. They (the SNP) have had their problems and they still have their problems. It’s a very difficult time.

“I love playing Scottish characters and long may I continue to do so. But as a child I always talked in an American accent. I enjoy playing American characters enormously. But living in America has its problems, as you can imagine, with the man I call the Pink Pinocchio. It must be really hard for people in the Western Isles (where his mother was born).

“There is a kind of zeitgeist of disaffecti­on here and in the US. It is also about people who have been ignored in a way to the peril of both countries at large. We see that with Brexit and what is happening with the move to a more right-wing state in America. It’s kind of scary.”

 ??  ?? 0 Brian Cox made his Hollywood breakthrou­gh in Michael Mann’s Manhunter playing Hannibal Lecter
0 Brian Cox made his Hollywood breakthrou­gh in Michael Mann’s Manhunter playing Hannibal Lecter
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