đ§ Power, Delusion & Matthew Macfadyenâs Post-âSuccessionâ Bet
The Emmy winner plays a real-life presidential assassin in Netflixâs âDeath by Lightningâ

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In 2023, after Succession ended following four Emmy-winning seasons, Matthew Macfadyen had what he described as âthe actorâs worry.â Macfadyen won two Emmys for playing the showâs striving, weaselly son-in-law, Tom Wambsgans, and when it was all over, he says, âYou think, âGod, what do I do now? Nothing will be as good.ââ
What Macfadyen found next turned out to be another midwestern American with delusions of grandeur and a tenuous grasp on his own limitations: Charles Guiteau, the man who assassinated President James Garfield in 1881 and has since been lost to history â until being resurrected on the Netflix limited series Death by Lightning. Making the four-episode series from creator Mike Makowsky (an Emmy winner for Bad Education) appealed to Macfadyen because it had a set beginning and end, unlike Succession, and was filmed relatively close to his home in London, recreating 19th-century America on the streets of Budapest. But there was another appeal that I, at least, could not have predicted.
âI really liked my beard,â Macfadyen, 51, tells me on todayâs episode of the Prestige Junkie podcast. âItâs like wearing a hat, it just changes your face. And then you shave, and itâs terrifying because your face looks sort of like an egg. Your upper lip looks really insubstantial, and that upsets your offspring.â

Iâm a huge fan of Death by Lightning, which looks back at politics in the 1880s to find itâs just as much of a cesspool of selfishness and greed as it is today, if not even more. Macfadyenâs wild-eyed Guiteau never actually ascends to any power, but the men who actually possess it â like Shea Whighamâs pugnacious Roscoe Conkling or Nick Offermanâs bruiser Chester A. Arthur, who seems as shocked as anyone to eventually become the 21st president â are no wiser or better-hearted. The enormous exception turns out to be James Garfield himself, played by a beautifully restrained Michael Shannon as someone who actually wants to be president for the right reasons â not that it does him any good in the end.
âIt didnât feel like a period piece,â Macfadyen, who was born in England, tells me. âHuman behavior hasnât really changed. Conventions change, clothes change and manners change, to a degree. But the nuts and bolts of what we do, and what we want â the driving forces â are the same, arenât they?â
Macfadyen tells me how he dug into playing someone who, by modern standards, would be considered mentally ill, yet who also remains oddly endearing in his misplaced efforts to make his own mark on America. And he goes deep on the realities of being an actor âbouncing from job to job,â and accepting the lack of control that comes with that.
âI think the only way I can operate is just to sort of bumble along,â he tells me. âIâm always amazed when people say itâs going really well â like they can trace a through line. And Iâm like, that doesnât make any sense.â
Hear much more from Macfadyen on todayâs episode of the Prestige Junkie podcast, which also includes my conversation with Vanity Fairâs Chris Murphy about the new season of Euphoria, and whether Zendaya can take home a third Emmy in the midst of whatâs already shaping up to be her banner year.


