Brian Cox says his character Logan Roy was written out of Succession âtoo earlyâ


Brian Cox says he thinks his foul-mouthed character of Logan Roy was written out âtoo earlyâ of the hit HBO show Succession.
The Scottish actor, 76, said although the shock twist had been done âin a pretty brilliant wayâ he had felt âa little bit rejectedâ by the decision.
The Roy family patriarch and global media tycoon was killed off in episode three of the latest series, which also stars Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook and Kieran Culkin.
Speaking on BBC Twoâs Amol Rajan Interviews ahead of Successionâs series four finale, Cox said it would perhaps have been more appropriate for the character to die in the fifth or sixth episode.
âI was fine with it ultimately, but I did feel a little bit rejected,â he said.
âYou know, I felt a little bit, oh, all the work Iâve done and finally Iâm going to, you know, end up as an ear on a carpet of a plane.â

Details of Loganâs death were a well-kept secret, which Cox said he played a part in by appearing on set to âfilmâ scenes he was not required to be in.
Cox said he had gone âon (his) own volitionâ so that members of the paparazzi attending the shoot would not become suspicious.
In the BBC interview, he also told Rajan that he thinks Logan might still be alive.
âI still believe this, maybe Logan isnât dead. This could be part of an elaborate ruse to find out,â he said.

âIf you think about it, from Loganâs point of view, he has to find out how are his children going to behave when he dies, what will then happen?
âThe only way to do that is to fake his death and actually, at some distant point, heâs observing the chaos that is following.â
But he added that the character would not âcome back from the deadâ, saying: âIâm just saying that could have been a supposition.â
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During the interview, Cox also reflected on his childhood, his career, his thoughts on Scottish independence and why he supports the writerâs strike in Hollywood.
The full interview, Brian Cox: Amol Rajan Interviews, is on BBC Two on Thursday May 25 at 7pm and BBC iPlayer.