Queen’s Roger Taylor says Sacha Baron Cohen would have been “utter shit” as Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody (the movie)

Author Jad - 7.12.2021

Queen’s Roger Taylor has offered a scathing assessment of Sacha Baron Cohen’s acting abilities, and suggested that the English film star, best known for his creation and portrayal of the comedy character Borat, would have been “utter shit” in the role of Freddie Mercury in the hugely successful Queen biopic Bohemian Rhapsody. 

When the film project was first made public in 2010, it was revealed that Sacha Baron Cohen would be cast in the role of Queen’s flamboyant frontman, but the actor walked away from the production in the summer of 2013. Baron Cohen later claimed that Brian May and Roger Taylor disagreed with his vision of presenting a “warts ‘n’ all’ portrayal of Mercury, and wanted “to protect their legacy as a band”, while Roger Taylor suggested that Baron Cohen “didn’t take Freddie seriously enough.” After numerous script rewrites and cast and director changes, Bohemian Rhapsody finally emerged in 2018 and went on to win four Oscars and break box office records worldwide, earning close to one billion dollars. 

Interviewed in the new issue of Classic Rock magazine, which went on sale today, December 7, Roger Taylor says:

Everything resulting from the film was just so positive. It was fantastic.

I think he would have been utter shit. Sacha is pushy, if nothing else. He’s also six inches too tall. But I watched his last five films and came to the conclusion he’s not a very good actor… I thought he was an utterly brilliant subversive comedian, that’s what he’s great at. Anyway, I think Rami did a brilliant job in an almost impossible role.

We kind of got it right in the end, we wanted to take people on a journey, make them feel up and then down, then joyous at the end.

Queen drummer Roger Taylor in a recent interview with Classic Rock magazine

For much, much more from Roger Taylor, pick up the new issue of Classic Rock magazine, which goes on-sale today, December 7.