Hot topics close

Jeremy Strong Says ‘Succession’ Role ‘F—ed Me Up’ and ‘I Don’t Miss It’: ‘I Sometimes Lost Touch With Joy’

Jeremy Strong Says Succession Role Fed Me Up and I Dont Miss It I 
Sometimes Lost Touch With Joy
Jeremy Strong says playing Kendall Roy for four seasons of HBO's "Succession" did not leave him in a mindset he wants to revisit.

Jeremy Strong said in a recent interview with The Times of London that playing Kendall Roy on HBO’s “Succession” for four seasons “fucked me up.” The actor won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for the role, but he has no interest in returning to the world of “Succession” because he “sometimes lost touch with joy” while having to stay in Kendall’s tortured mindset.

“That show was an incalculable gift. The material a banquet. So I miss that. But Kendall’s struggle was difficult to carry for seven years,” Strong said. “And there’s just so much more I want to do.”

When asked about a Kendall Roy spinoff series, Strong responded: “It’s not something I have any wish to do any longer. I’m aware it is one of the main chapters of my life, but I don’t miss it.”

Popular on Variety

Related Stories

Strong went on to say that he’s “rediscovered play” since wrapping “Succession” and taking on non-Kendall Roy roles such as Roy Cohn in the Donald Trump movie “The Apprentice.” The actor told The New York Times Magazine earlier this year that he wanted to move on from Kendall quickly.

“There was a moment when the show ended where I felt a profound sense of, ‘Was this the thing? Was this the event of my life?’ And then a great determination to achieve exit velocity from it so I could attempt to do more,” he said at the time.

Strong added that “I haven’t spent much time worrying about” whether he’ll be able to distance himself from Kendall, which will always be his career-defining role. The New York Times Magazine noted that many actors, be it James Gandolfini (“The Sopranos”) or Alan Alda (“M*A*S*H”), struggled to move their careers beyond an iconic TV role. That doesn’t appear to be a concern for Strong.

“I went right into Roy Cohn, partly just to sort of shake [‘Succession’] off,” Strong said. “Roy Cohn, you can’t overstate his influence in our country, his legacy of the denial of reality and certain things that he imparted to Donald Trump. His playbook has a tentacular reach that is staggering — the most fascinating person I’ve ever tried to inhabit. I should say a disclaimer: My job is to be a humanistic investigator of a subject and to withhold judgment. So while I personally might have a lot of judgment about Roy Cohn, that is not the part of me that engages in the creative work.”

Head over to The Times of London’s website to read Strong’s latest profile in its entirety.

Similar news
News Archive
  • Aggreko
    Aggreko
    Generator Rental for Temporary Power Market to Predicts Huge Growth by 2028 | Power Electrics, Generator Power ...
    7 May 2022
    1
  • New Orleans
    New Orleans
    New Orleans flexes culinary might, perhaps in time to blunt restaurants' summer lull
    12 Jun 2024
    10
  • Chassis cab
    Chassis cab
    Ineos launches new Quartermaster Chassis Cab
    16 Mar 2024
    3
  • Natalie Viscuso
    Natalie Viscuso
    Henry Cavill expecting first child with Natalie Viscuso
    16 Apr 2024
    1
  • Benny Blanco
    Benny Blanco
    Inside Benny Blanco's Eclectic LA Home, Which Doubles as ...
    2 May 2024
    5
  • Costar
    Costar
    CoStar: Mixed Results Continue for U.S. Hotel Performance
    11 May 2024
    3
This week's most popular news