
"I think he's all in and Kendall is a mountaineer, he needs an Eiger to climb but it's that compulsion which is also destructive in him." Strong said: "At least at the beginning of the season it starts out with this alliance, we're finally flying in V-formation and we've got this project that we're working on together called The Hundred, which for Kendall becomes sort of the new answer and the new cure-all. In Season 4, the siblings are united against their father and have a brand new venture titled The Hundred that they plan to launch as a counter to his media empire. Season 3 ended on a dramatic note, with Kendall and his siblings Shiv (Sarah Snook) and Roman (Kieran Culkin) deciding to veto their father Logan's ( Brian Cox) sale of Waystar Royco to Lukas Mattson (Alexander Skarsgård), only for their plans to be thwarted when Shiv's husband Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) revealed their plot to Logan. I mean, it's hard for me to wrap my head around the magnitude of what this journey has been."
#Strong together by series free
I feel relieved to be free of it, and I'm also going to miss so much about it. I feel that the arc of this character in particular had run its course, and I didn't wish to try and extend that for the sake of making more seasons. "I feel ready to be done, I think similarly to Jesse. "I think it felt inevitable to me," he went on.

"I found out with the rest of us, I think at the table read of the final episode, so very late" the actor said of when he knew it was the end. When he learned that Succession would be over the actor was "relieved." Strong said Kendall Roy has often been "frustrating" to portray, since the actor prefers to use method acting to get fully immersed in his roles.

The actor told Newsweek what it was like to say goodbye to the character.

Jeremy Strong as Kendall Roy in "Succession" Season 4.
