Rolling Stone

TV’s True Son of Anarchy

As media scion Kendall Roy on HBO’s ‘Succession,’ Jeremy Strong has learned to break bad

- BY STEPHEN RODRICK

On HBO’s Succession, Jeremy Strong has learned to break bad.

Jeremy strong is not a broken man. He comes from a good family — his mom a hospice nurse, his father a social worker. Strong went to Yale and picked up tips from Daniel Day-Lewis while serving as the actor’s assistant. He knows what he’s doing. Profession­ally, he is a favorite of Aaron Sorkin. Currently, he is happily ensconced in Brooklyn with his wife and two little kids.

Alas, he plays a broken man on television. In fact, Strong’s Kendall Roy is one of the best broken men in the history of the idiot box. The fucked-up second-oldest son of media titan Logan Roy (played by Brian Cox) on HBO’s delightful­ly grim Succession, Kendall pinballs from patricidal thoughts to drug-addled Chappaquid­dick moments to ill-conceived freestyle raps, with stopovers at family betrayal. The role won Strong his first Emmy, in September.

Just how fucked up is Kendall? His own girlfriend tells him that his father only loves him in shattered pieces.

So, Strong had to get to broken. He detests the term “Method acting” — “I don’t even know what that means,” he says via Zoom, one of his young kids cooing in the next room. Still, he does have a specific way of doing business. The 41-year-old actor likes to be in what he calls a “negative space” when he first reads a script. “You have a chance for the writing to act upon you,” he says, “and you have only that one chance.” He smiles. “I go into airplane mode.”

After absorbing the Succession script, Strong set upon understand­ing Kendall’s affluent fragility. He read Andre Agassi’s memoir for clues on how a son terrorized by a domineerin­g father could make his way in a world that he despised. And, though the show’s creators have denied it is based on media goon Rupert Murdoch’s family, Strong visited the Murdoch library for prep.

“I read in Michael Wolff ’s The Man Who Owns the News that Rupert only spoke and understood the language of strength,” Strong says. “And I remember feeling, ‘What would it be like to be his son if strength was not your native language?’ ”

As they float on a yacht off of the coast of Croatia, Logan tells Kendall that he has chosen him to take the fall for a scandal that threatens to destroy the family business, and that he’s probably going to jail for a long time. There’s been a death involved, but Logan dismisses the victim, saying there was “no real person involved.” The words recall a moment in Season One, when Kendall killed someone in a car wreck, and his family covered it up.

Kendall meekly accepts his fate, then gives his father a soft peck on the cheek. It turns out to be a Judas kiss. In the final scene, a press conference where Kendall is supposed to cop to the crime, he tells the media horde that his father is, in fact, a monster.

“There was a lot of back-andforth with [show creator] Jesse Armstrong on the boat scene, and an 11th-hour rewrite,” says Strong. “When Logan says ‘not a real person,’ it takes Kendall back to that car. The trigger was there, the firing pin was there, we just needed the hammer.”

The gilded vulgarity of the Roys is the one-percent side of the current American moment. Strong recently experience­d the other side playing Sixties countercul­ture icon Jerry Rubin in Sorkin’s The Trial of the Chicago 7. The film dramatizes an era-defining court case in which Rubin and six others were charged with felonies tied to protests that turned violent at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago.

“We were marching down the street, chanting ‘No justice, no peace’ and ‘The people, united, will never be defeated,’ fists raised — and this was in October of last year,” says Strong. “Even then, it felt powerful. We had no way of knowing we would all be saying those same things in Minneapoli­s, in Atlanta, and in Kenosha and Portland and Seattle.”

Strong has built his career on socially relevant films, from Selma to Lincoln to Katherine Bigelow’s underrated Detroit. That’s no accident. “I’ve never wanted anything more than to be part of telling meaningful stories,” he says.

Strong felt such a responsibi­lity to Rubin, he asked Sorkin to actually tear-gas him for one of the protest scenes. He seems embarrasse­d the news got out, but says, “I need to believe what I’m doing is really happening.”

He returns to Succession, and the final scene of Season One, where Kendall, after his car accident, goes from stoic passivity to a sobbing man on the verge of a breakdown in front of his father.

“I feel very proud of that scene, but I don’t know where that came from, and I don’t know if I could do that again.” He twists himself in his chair and looks lost for a moment. “That leaves you feeling like this doesn’t belong to you. It’s humbling and quite terrifying.”

As he awaits word on the filming of Season Three, Strong cops to some “dread and fear, because you have to start at zero every time.” But he’s more excited about how the character is allowing him to stretch his muscles.

“I feel like I’ve been driving a Bugatti at 20 miles an hour,” he says, “and now I can let it go.”

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“I need to believe what I’m doing is really happening,” says Strong, in Williamsbu­rg, Brooklyn, in September.
POWER PLAY “I need to believe what I’m doing is really happening,” says Strong, in Williamsbu­rg, Brooklyn, in September.

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