![]() ![]() “So Connor and Willa had a really sweet moment, a brief bit of time where they were together and they were partners and they were equals,” he continues, “and they had that great scene together on the day of the wedding/death. “I don’t actually think it bodes well,” Ruck says of their arrangement, citing the overarching theory of Succession that “people don’t change.” He adds, “For the characters in this show, I think that’s absolutely true.” With the ambassadorship to Slovenia on the table-if Jeryd Mencken can retain his precarious hold on the presidency- Connor and his new wife Willa are exploring the possibility of a “long-distance thing” to “add another dimension” to their relationship. He’s administering the “Great Reallocation” at his late father’s townhouse, which he bought off Marcia in an earlier episode for a cool $63 million. ![]() Ruck’s character, Connor Roy-the real “eldest boy” of the family despite what Jeremy Strong’s Kendall might think-only really appears in one scene relatively early in the final episode. ![]()
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