Brian Cox
About Brian Cox
Scottish-born Brian Cox spent many years toiling in relative anonymity before achieving a degree of fame for his Broadway work and his film and TV roles that ran the gamut from villains to tragic figures. The intense solidly-built performer garnered a cult following with his turn as Dr Hannibal Lektor [sic] in "Manhunter" (1986), some five years prior to Anthony Hopkins' Oscar-winning version of the criminal mastermind. Indeed, many have found Cox' take on the character far scarier and better-acted than Hopkins.’
Born in Dundee, Scotland on June 1, 1946, Cox was the youngest of five. Following his father's untimely death (when Cox was nine) and his mother's subsequent mental breakdowns, he was raised primarily by his older sisters and an aunt. In school, Cox developed a reputation as the class clown but he was troubled and barely achieving passing grades. When he discovered the Dundee Repertory Theatre when he was 14, things improved dramatically. ("I knew I belonged there from day one," the actor has said.) Making his debut in "Dover Road", Cox spent the next several years honing his craft. After attending LAMDA, he went on further his training in the British repertory system, eventually making his London stage debut in the 1967 Birmingham Repertory Theatre production of "As You Like It.”
Cox segued to feature films as Trotsky in 1971's historical epic "Nicholas and Alexandra,” but he only had one additional movie role over the next decade and a half. In 1975, he preserved his well-received stage role as a miner's son in the film adaptation of "In Celebration" helmed by Lindsay Anderson. Instead, Cox concentrated on his burgeoning stage career, amassing credits in classical roles like Brutus in "Julius Caesar" (1977), and the title roles in "Macbeth" (1980) and "Danton's Death" (1982).
Cox co-starred with Glenda Jackson and Edward Petherbridge in the revisionist staging of Eugene O'Neill's "Strange Interlude" in 1984, making his Broadway debut the following year reprising his part as the doctor who helps the heroine to have a child. His success in this part led to roles in American-produced TV-movies like "Pope John Paul" (CBS, 1984) and "Beryl Markham: A Shadow on the Sun" (CBS, 1988), as well as reviving his film career (beginning with Lektor in 1986's "Manhunter").
Returning to London, Cox garnered some of the best reviews of his career to that date playing Shakespeare's "Titus Andronicus" (1988), for which he also earned numerous accolades, including an Olivier Award. He went on to deliver a complex, layered portrayal of a closeted homosexual struggling with the discovery that his son is also gay in the 1991 British TV-movie "The Lost Language of Cranes". That same year, Cox was also fine as a wealthy eccentric who has had his former wife duplicated in a laboratory in "The Cloning of Joanna May" for Granada Television. He subsequently portrayed the Irish mentor of a British rifleman in the first two installments of "Sharpe" (1993), which aired in the USA on PBS' "Masterpiece Theater.”
Cox was featured in the Oscar-winning "Braveheart" (1995) and that same year also had a pivotal role in another historical epic "Rob Roy", playing a snitch whose information leads to the death of a kinsman of the title character. He continued to rack up supporting parts in such unworthy efforts as "The Long Kiss Goodnight" and "The Glimmer Man" (both 1996) before landing the strong role of an IRA leader in "The Boxer" (1997). Returning to the stage, he triumphed in Conor McPherson's one-man drama "St Nicholas" (1997) before succeeding Alan Alda in the Tony-winning play "Art" (in 1998), Cox was delightful as the stern headmaster of "Rushmore" (1998) and was touching as a self-destructive alcoholic who unwittingly befriends a serial killer in "The Minus Man" (1999). After playing Mark Wahlberg's Irish cop father in "The Corrupter" (also 1999), the actor portrayed a baseball team owner looking to sell his flagging franchise in the Kevin Costner vehicle "For Love of the Game" (2000). Additionally, he shone as Lord Morton in the acclaimed TV drama "Longitude" (A&E, 2000) and elevated the mediocre serial killer drama "Complicity" (also 2000). But perhaps his best performance of that year was his Emmy-winning turn as Nazi Hermann Goering in the TNT original "Nuremberg.”
Cox kicked off the new millennium with a spate of feature roles including two screened at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival, the drama "L.I.E." (in which he portrayed a pedophile) and the comedy "SuperTroopers." Additionally, he had supporting roles in the sports-themed "A Shot at Glory", the gangster drama "Strictly Sinatra", the period drama "The Affair of the Necklace" and the spy thriller "The Bourne Identity", ensuring that audiences would be enjoying his screen presence throughout 2001. His momentum continued in 2002, where he appeared in several well-received films including the smaller British drama "The Reckoning" and as a CIA chief attempting to cover his tracks in the popular Matt Damon spy thriller "The Bourne Identity" based on the best-selling Robert Ludlum novel--a role Cox reprised in the 2004 sequel "The Bourne Supremacy." The actor also received critical raves and an Emmy nomination for his guest role as the besotted father of Daphne Moon (Jane Leeves) on the hit series "Frasier." His feature film efforts continued to show diversity, with Cox appearing in the family-friendly baseball film "The Rookie," the horrific thriller "The Ring" and Spike Lee's character drama "The 25th Hour." He also lensed what may be his most visible and commercial role yet, playing the X-Men's villainous anti-mutant adversary Stryker in director Bryan Singer's big-budget sequel "X2: X-Men United" (2003).
Cox took on the historic role of King Agamemnon in "Troy" (2004), Wolfgang Petersen's epic, action-oriented adaptation of Homer's tale of the Trojan War, delivering a rare scenery-chewing performance that nevertheless enlivened the often turgid film. He cut a more subdued figure in his brief supporting role in the Wes Craven-directed thriller "Red Eye" (2005), playing the father of a terrorized but resourceful hotel employee (Rachel McAdams), his life unknowingly on the line as she's menaced by a mysterious stranger during a red-eye flight. In “The Ringer” (2005), Cox played the smarmy uncle of a nice guy (Johnny Knoxville) who convinces his nephew to participate in the Special Olympics as a ringer in order to raise money for a man hospitalized after a lawn care accident. He then appeared in Woody Allen’s return to form, “Match Point” (2005), playing the rich, but charitable father-in-law of an ex-tennis pro (Jonathan Rhys-Meyers) who embarks upon a passionate and ultimately complicated love affair with a struggling American actress (Scarlett Johansson). Atypically reserved in his performance, Cox was overshadowed by costars Meyers, Johansson and Emily Mortimer, as well as Allen’s surprisingly deft direction.
For his next project, Cox was set to appear as an unorthodox psychiatrist who cares for the bipolar mother of a young boy (Joseph Cross) in the adaptation of Augusten Burrough’s best-selling memoir, “Running With Scissors” (2006). In mid-2005, it was announced that Cox would join the cast of HBO’s award-winning revisionist western, “Deadwood” (2004- ), playing the real-life Jack Langrishe, an eccentric theater owner who tries to bring art and culture to the lawless town. Though an exuberant presence in the violent western town—his exchanges with old pal Al Swearengen (Ian McShane) were a high point of the underrated third season—it was not meant to last, as “Deadwood” was unceremoniously axed from HBO’s schedule.
Returning to the big screen, Cox costarred in “Zodiac” (2007), David Fincher’s take on the famed Zodiac Killer, who was credited with five grisly murders in the Bay Area during the late-1960s. An elusive killer who reveled in taunting the media and police, The Zodiac’s identity was never discovered, while several other similar murderers were loosely—but not officially—attributed to him. Cox portrayed Melvin Belli, the famed personal injury lawyer who became involved in the case when the killer supposedly called him while the lawyer was on live television, only to learn it was a hoax from a patient in a mental institution. The killer did, however, send the lawyer a Christmas postcard later in the year.
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Nicole Ansari | wife | born c. 1966; married in 2002 |
| Alan Cox | son | born on August 6, 1970; mother, Caroline Burt; played Watson in "Young Sherlock Holmes" |
| Orson Cox | son | born January 31, 2002; mother, Nicole Ansari |
| Margaret Cox | daughter | born c. 1977; mother, Caroline Burt |
| Torin Kamran Charles | son | born October 26, 2004; mother, Nicole Ansari |
| Mary Ann Guillerline Cox | mother | Roman Catholic; suffered several mental breakdowns when Cox was a child |
| Charles McArdle Campbell Cox | father | died when Cox was nine years old (c. 1955) |
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Siri Neal | companion | no longer together |
| Irina Brook | companion | daughter of director Peter Brook; no longer together |
| Embarked on world tour playing "King Lear" | |
| Had co-starring role in the ABC 2001-2002 midseason replacement "The Court" | |
| Raised in Dundee, Scotland | |
| Staged "The Crucible" at the Moscow Arts Theatre | |
| 1960 | At age 14, joined the Dundee Repertory Company and began acting career; debuted in "Dover Road" |
| 1966 - 1967 | Spent season with Birmingham Repertory Theatre; made London stage debut with troupe as Orlando in "As You Like It" |
| 1969 | First association with the Royal Court Theatre in London, acted in "In Celebration"; portrayed a miner's son |
| 1971 | Film debut, as Trotsky in "Nicholas and Alexandra" |
| 1972 | Appeared in "Hedda Gabler" at the Royal Court |
| 1973 | Stage directing debut, "The Man with a Flower in His Mouth" (Manchester) |
| 1975 | Reprised stage role of Steven in the film version of "In Celebration" |
| 1976 | Began working at the National Theatre in London |
| 1980 | TV debut, as Laurent Raquin in "Therese Raquin", opposite Kate Nelligan; aired in USA on PBS |
| 1982 | Had title role in the National Theatre production of "Danton' Death" |
| 1984 | Co-starred opposite Glenda Jackson on the London stage in Eugene O'Neill's play "Strange Interlude" |
| 1984 | Garnered acclaim for starring role in the stage play "Rat in the Skull" |
| 1984 | Supported Laurence Olivier in the TV adaptation of "King Lear"; played Burgundy |
| 1985 | Broadway debut reprising role in "Strange Interlude", opposite Jackson |
| 1985 | Reprised lead in Off-Broadway staging of "Rat in the Skull" at the Public Theater |
| 1986 | Created role of Dr Hannibal Lektor [sic] in "Manhunter" |
| 1988 | Stage breakthrough, had title role in Royal Shakespeare production of "Titus Andronicus"; also toured Europed in part |
| 1989 | Originated role of Frankie in the London premiere of Terrence McNally's "Frankie and Johnnie in the Clair-de-Lune" |
| 1991 | Cast as a closeted homosexual who must confront his own sexual orientation when his son reveals he is gay in the British TV adaptation of "The Lost Language of Cranes" |
| 1991 | Portrayed a wealthy man who has had duplicate copies of his wife made in "The Cloning of Joanna May" |
| 1993 | Appeared in episodes of "Sharpe" |
| 1993 | Played title role in the BBC film "Grushko" |
| 1995 | Acted in the period epics "Rob Roy" and "Braveheart" |
| 1997 | Appeared as an IRA leader in "The Boxer" |
| 1997 | Had lead role in the L.A. premiere of David Hare's play "Skylight" |
| 1997 | Received glowing notices for his performance in the one-person play "St. Nicholas", by Conor McPherson; role written expressly for Cox; reprised role in NYC |
| 1998 | Cast as the school's headmaster in "Rushmore", directed by Wes Anderson and co-written by Owen Wilson |
| 1998 | Co-starred in the HBO original "Poodle Springs" |
| 1998 | Made unsold pilot for CBS drama series "The Family Brood", playing the patriarch of an Irish Catholic family of firefighters |
| 1998 | Succeeded Alan Alda as Marc in the award-winning "Art" on Broadway |
| 1999 | Cast as the crusty owner of a baseball team in "For Love of the Game" |
| 1999 | Starred opposite Wilson as an unhappily married man who takes in a serial killer (Wilson) as a boarder in "The Minus Man" |
| 2000 | Acted in McPherson's play "Dublin Carol" at the Old Vic and then the Royal Court |
| 2000 | Co-starred in "Longitude"; aired in USA on A&E |
| 2000 | Portrayed Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering in the TNT miniseries "Nuremberg" |
| 2000 | Portrayed the bankrupt owner of a chip shop in "Saltwater", directed by McPherson and based on his play "This Lime Tree Bower" |
| 2001 | Featured in two motion pictures premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, "Super Troopers" and "L.I.E."; cast as a pedophile in the latter and won nearly unanimous critical praise for his performance |
| 2001 | Played supporting roles in "Strictly Sinatra" and "The Affair of the Necklace" |
| 2002 | Appeared in the supernatural/high-tech thriller "The Ring" |
| 2002 | Co-starred with Matt Damon in "The Bourne Identity" |
| 2002 | Had supporting role in "The Reckoning" |
| 2002 | Portrayed real-life screenwriting seminar instructor Robert McKee in Kaufman's pseudo-autobiographical film, "Adaptation" |
| 2002 | cast in director Spike Lee's "The 25th Hour" |
| 2003 | Played the villainous, anti-mutant crusader Stryker in "X2," the sequel to "X-Men" |
| 2004 | Cast as Agamemnon in director Wolfgang Petersen's Greek epic "Troy" |
| 2004 | Cast opposite Paul Bettany and Willem Dafoe in "The Reckoning" |
| 2004 | Revised role of Ward Abbott in "The Bourne Supremacy" opposite Matt Damon |
| 2005 | Co-starred in Woody Allen's "Match Point" |
| 2006 | Joined the cast of HBO's "Deadwood" as theater owner, Jack Langrishe |
| 2006 | Played Dr. Finch, the oddly hypnotic psychotherapist in "Running With Scissors" |
| 2007 | Played Melvin Belli, a celebrity defense lawyer in David Fincher's thriller "Zodiac" |
Notes
"A wonderful old friend of mine, Fulton McKay, who played the old tramp in the Bill Forsythe film "Local Hero", used to tell me, 'Brian, why are you worried about being a star? Just be a good actor. Say your prayers and be a good actor.'
"It's the best advice anyone ever gave me." --Cox to Patrick Pachecho, quoted in Los Angeles Times Calendar, August 1, 1999.
"I'm curious about evil people. I get quite emotional about them and quite fond of them. I never judge them. There's a deficiency which makes them lose any sense of right or wrong. Hannibal Lecter is frightening because he has no boundaries. We haven't found his fear and we haven't found his love." --Brian Cox on one of his better known roles, quoted in the London Times, January 2, 2000.
"It sounds vain, but I dread ever being offered a knighthood. I love gongs, I love Oscars, but I would have to turn a knighthood down because it sanctions something I don't believe in. It sanctions keeping people in their place." --Cox quoted in the London Times, January 2, 2000.
"It's taken Brian a long time to find himself. His work has always had a strong moral quality and a Celtic streak. And he has another quality: the courage to explore his emotions. That's rare for a British actor." --Lindsay Anderson.
"One of the reasons I work in this country [the USA] now is because [although] I get on with a lot of people in England, I've also pissed a lot of people off over there." --Brian Cox quoted in Time Out New York, September 17-24, 1998.
"People that knew me well when I was younger always said that my career was going to take off when I was much older," said Cox. "I was a little bit resentful of that, because I felt I had a bit to offer, and I had a very good career. But I aim for the long haul. It made more sense, and certainly has given me more weight as an actor, to come on the scene like a tank, proceeding forward fully equipped and fully armored."---Cox to Los Angeles Times, October 22, 2006.
Cox is a diabetic and has worked to promote a diabetes research facility in his home town of Dundee.
In 1997, Brian Cox was the voice of Labour Party political broadcasts in the United Kingdom and was scheduled to perform a similar function in 1999 during the Scottish parliamentary elections but a joke he made to journalists "expressing a wish that Scottish devolution might lead to English independence" cost him the job. --From the London Times, January 2, 2000.
More Brian Cox videos Related Videos
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VIDEO
For Love of the Game
An aging pitcher learns that he will soon lose his girlfriend and his spot with the Detroit Tigers.
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Quick Facts
Born
June, 01 1946 in Dundee, Scotland
Education
- London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, London, England
Professions
actor, director