Born in Dundee, Scotland in 1946, Brian Cox has enjoyed a formidably prolific career in theatre, film and television. He has worked extensively with the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he gained recognition for his portrayal of Titus Andronicus, as he did several years later when he played the part of King Lear at the National Theatre. Cox was the first Hannibal Lecter in Manhunter. He is also famous for his roles in, amongst others, Succession, Sharpe, Rob Roy, Braveheart, The Boxer, Rushmore, L.I.E, Super Troopers, Troy, The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy, X2: X-Men United, Red and Churchill.
A hugely readable memoir from a giant of stage and screen
*Mark Kermode*
A life well lived and a story well told. From first page to last
Brian Cox the great actor is Brian Cox the great storyteller, and
nobody is spared his sharp eye and his caustic wit, himself and
some big Hollywood names included. He is brutally honest about who
and what he likes and doesn't like, and honest too about his own
failings. But what shines through every page is a man who loves
being an actor and who has a deep understanding of why culture, and
especially theatre and film, really matter.
*Alastair Campbell*
Rage and vulnerability, loss and passion, self-doubt, triumphs and
laughs. Brian Cox's memoir brings to mind the Blake poem "What is
the price of experience ? Do men buy it for a song? Or wisdom for a
dance in the street? No, it is bought with the price of all that a
man hath: his wife, his house his children'." What a treat and
privilege to be invited in. I've never read a book that conveys the
joy, grace and pain of the journey of being an actor and a human
more honestly and with such straightforward blistering charm.
*Kate Beckinsale*
It is much more than a rabbit Mr. Cox pulls out of his hat. In this
candid vision of his life it is revealed how it is he is able so
convincingly, authentically and uniquely to play such an abundance
of characters. All of them different, all of them real, all of them
him.
*Hampton Fancher*
Brian Cox is not only one of the greatest actors of his generation,
he is a gentleman among men. Kind, wise, funny and intense in the
best ways possible, Brian is also a wonderful tale teller as this
book proves. It is an honor to call him a friend and I'm so proud
of him. What a life well lived.
*Ryan Murphy*
Wonderfully honest, touching and funny.
*Gemma Jones*
There has always been a coiled spring energy to Brian's acting and,
now in his 70s, he has lost none of it. This book is like listening
to him talk, switching from anecdote to diatribe to honest
self-reflection and back to his original story before he
interrupted himself. The effect is of undiminished curiosity and
passion for life and work. All his observations are laced with his
characteristic generosity, self-deprecation and cut-the-crap
wisdom
*Harriet Walter*
[It] grips from the beginning - a witty prologue about the
preposterousness of Steven Segal - and is the sort of riveting,
candid read you might expect from the illustrious Succession
actor
*Martin Chilton, Independent*
Simply a delight, so much so that it's tempting to consume it in
one sitting [...] mesmerizing
*Peter Biskind*
An insightful look into his extraordinary life and career - which
sees no signs of slowing down
*Radio Times*
Blisteringly brilliant
*Daily Telegraph*
A splendid memoir [and] a deeply intelligent exploration of his
chosen profession, its joyous rewards and its mind-scratching
demands... Throughout, his honesty is disarming
*Tortoise*
A tale like no other, it's a seminal autobiography
*Edinburgh Evening News*
Clever, perceptive ... brilliant
*The Times*
One of the best showbiz memoirs ever written... it's as funny as it
is furious... Brian Cox has done everything and with this book he
leaves everyone else standing
*Mail on Sunday*
Cox's book is digressive and gossipy, as all celebrity biographies
should be. It's also very funny, and as salty as you would expect
from the man who has conclusively proved that there are at least 50
different ways of saying f*** off
*Irish Independent*
The iconic Scottish actor traces his life story from his childhood
in Dundee to his extraordinary career on both screen and stage
*Scots Magazine*
It's a book full of wonderful stories and huge insight into the
whole business of acting and the workings of the human soul...
absolute heaven
*Sunday Times*
Cox writes beautifully... Putting the Rabbit in the Hat is a rare
and brilliant thing: an honest, genuinely funny and moving memoir
from a star who has a real story to tell
*Sunday Business Post*
His writing is as compelling as any of his memorable
performances
*The Lady*
Few memoirs are as punchy and funny
*Independent*
A picaresque odyssey ... opinionated, forthright and sometimes
self-lacerating, it's a pungent, engrossing read
*Total Film*
Wildly enjoyable
*Evening Standard*
Amusingly irreverent
*Guardian*
I loved it. It was so refreshing to read a biography where the
author was so incredibly up-front and honest
*Sunday Post*
The actor best known as Succession's Logan Roy reads his irreverent
memoir charting a long career on stage and screen
*Guardian*
One of the funniest, most rip-roaring, irreverent and candid
showbusiness memoirs of last year
*The Times*
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