Brian Cox was offered the role of Robert Baratheon on ‘Game of Thrones’

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Brian Cox has written a memoir called Putting the Rabbit in the Hat. There was a preview of the memoir late last year, and it sounds dishy as hell. Cox is 75 years old and he’s been around forever and he’s worked with almost everyone. Previously, we heard Cox’s harsh-but-funny assessments of everyone from Ed Norton (“a nice lad but a bit of a pain in the arse”), Michael Caine (“being an institution will always beat having range”), Johnny Depp (“so overblown, so overrated”) and David Bowie (“not a particularly good actor”). Well, would you like some more? Cox also talks about the films and projects he’s passed on, including Harry Potter, Game of Thrones and Pirates of the Caribbean.

On Game of Thrones: “I’m often asked if I was offered a role in ‘Game of Thrones’ — reason being that every other bugger was — and the answer is, yes, I was supposed to be a king called Robert Baratheon, who apparently died when he was gored by a boar in the first season. I know very little about ‘Game of Thrones’ so I can’t tell you whether or not he was an important character, and I’m not going to Google it just in case he was, because I turned it down. Why? Well, ‘Game of Thrones’ went on to be a huge success and everybody involved earned an absolute fortune, of course. But when it was originally offered the money was not all that great, shall we say. Plus I was going to be killed off fairly early on, so I wouldn’t have had any of the benefits of the long-term effects of a successful series where your wages go up with each passing season. So I passed on it, and Mark Addy was gored by the boar instead.”

Rejecting the Pirates franchise: “I turned my nose up at the part of the Governor in the ‘Pirates of the Caribbean franchise,’ a role that was eventually played by Jonathan Pryce…. The guy who directed ‘Pirates’ was Gore Verbinski, with whom I made ‘The Ring,’ and he’s a lovely chap but I think I blotted my copybook by turning down the Governor. It would have been a money-spinner, but of all the parts in that film it was the most thankless, plus I would have ended up doing it for film after film and missed out on all the other nice things I’ve done.”

He really doesn’t like Johnny Depp: “Another thing with ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ is that it’s very much the ‘Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow’ show, and Depp, personable though I’m sure he is, is so overblown, so overrated. I mean, ‘Edward Scissorhands.’ Let’s face it, if you come on with hands like that and pale, scarred-face make-up, you don’t have to do anything. And he didn’t. And subsequently, he’s done even less. But people love him. Or they did love him. They don’t love him so much these days, of course.”

Cox LOVES Spike Lee: “I did 25th Hour with Spike Lee in 2002, and he’s simply one of the best directors I’ve ever worked with. People associate him with African American subject matter, which is fine and fair enough, but they don’t realize that he’s a consummate cineaste. His knowledge of the cinema is second to none.”

On Harry Potter. That’s another one they ask me about. Harry f–king Potter. I think someone had a burning cross held up for me not to be in Harry Potter, because all my pals were in it. I think the part I might have played was the one that Brendan Gleeson got, Mad-Eye Moody, but Brendan was more in fashion than I was at that point, and that’s very much the way of the world in my business, so he got it. Also, he’s much better than I would have been.

[From GQ]

Usually, it’s pretty bad form for an actor to talk about what parts they passed on, but this is Brian Cox and I’m sure he doesn’t give a f–k at this point. Plus, he has that weird character-blend with his Succession character, Logan Roy. Nowadays, people *expect* him to be an arrogant a–hole, so it’s like: give the people what they want. In that excerpt in GQ, he does go on at length about Spike Lee and how amazing he is, how Spike is one of the true cinema masters working today. Brian would loooove to work with Spike again and now I really want that to happen. Also: I’m glad Mark Addy was Robert, Addy was really great. Cox was probably too old for the role? Cox would have made a fascinating Tywin Lannister though, right?? Although Charles Dance is fantastic in that role too.

PS… In Succession, Logan makes up a game called “Boar on the Floor.” Coincidence?

Brian Cox

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid and Instar.

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8 Responses to “Brian Cox was offered the role of Robert Baratheon on ‘Game of Thrones’”

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  1. lunchcoma says:

    I was about to note that it’s bad form to go on about roles that you’ve passed on, but he at least is balanced about it and sounds like he would have liked to have a Harry Potter role but didn’t have the opportunity. And he’s not wrong that the Baratheon part didn’t have the same kind of potential that some of the other roles did. It hasn’t really changed Mark Addy’s career the way some other Game of Thrones parts have changed other actor’s lives.

    Maybe I’m just giving him points because he shows fairly good judgment in who he builds up (Spike Lee) and who he tears down (Johnny Depp).

    • I feel the same way. I loved his take on Steven Seagal: “he radiates a studied serenity, as though he’s on a higher plane to the rest of us, and while he’s certainly on a different plane, no doubt about that, it’s probably not a higher one.”

  2. Bettyrose says:

    I can see it but it’s not much of a part. Some drunk raving and then dead.

  3. FF says:

    It went to the right person.

  4. BeanieBean says:

    I don’t know if I’ve ever seen him in anything, but I like his velvet-jacket game.

  5. Ariel says:

    Reading this stuff is SO MUCH FUN!!!

  6. detritus says:

    Not gonna lie, I love all of it.
    He seems to have excellent taste

  7. ED says:

    I love Brian Cox and agree with all he says here.

    The Johnny Depp assessment is so spot on too.

    Not a word of a lie was spoken!