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Richard Armitage interview with seasion 3 spoilers   Message List  
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Season 3 spoilers!!!! He really is a sweetie.
 

Bits and Bobs (Vol. 5 1/2): Exclusive 'Robin Hood' scoop from Richard Armitage!

Aug 1, 2008, 06:45 PM | by Aubry D’Arminio

Categories: An EW Exclusive!, Bits and Bobs, British things

Richardarmitage_l Good evening, anglophiles. Not only did Richard Armitage (pictured) call Bits and Bobs to answer the majority of your questions (we couldn't get to all of them, and for that I humbly apologize), but he also gave us some exclusive scoop on Robin Hood season 3. Gisborne's sister appears! We might have a flashback episode on the horizon! And he let us into the mind of his new MI-5 character Lucas North. Just be forewarned, if you don't want to know any season finale spoilers, I'd wait until after you watch it tomorrow night on BBC America at 9 p.m. to read this in its entirety. And don't forget, the entire season 2 hits stores on Tuesday.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: How are you?
Richard Armitage: Good, just a little bit hot. It's about 32 degrees [Celsius] today. It's absolutely baking. It's fine, though. You're probably used to it, but you know, being from England you don't often get this kind of heat, so it's good.

Is it burning inside Gisborne's leather outfit?
Well, it's slightly different this year. It's not quite so much leather, but there's a bit more weight to the costume, so it's proved to be as hot as the last couple of years.

Can you give us a hint as to what Guy is up to in season 3?
In season 3, Gisborne is on a downward spiral, so he's a bit of a car crash at the beginning when you find him. He's off the leash and he's turned to alcohol. He's a real mess. It's very much a revenge storyline between him and Robin because he blames Robin for perpetuating Marian's death and then Robin blames Gisborne obviously because he did it. So there is that sort of fire burning. Then he finds a way back through the character of Prince John and finds a new energy, a new force. That's what we're filming at the moment, but beyond that I'm not quite sure yet.

What do you think you'll do with the costume when the show is over?
You know what, it's really funny you should say that because, as I just said, there is actually a new costume designer that's come on board, and so the whole show has been sort of redesigned. At this moment Keith Allen, the Sheriff of Nottingham, is trying to buy my costume. And we're in a little bit of a bidding war as to who's going to get my costume. He wants Gisborne's costume so that he can sell it. But I think I'll try and get it just for myself as a bit of nostalgia. It's weird, because you know, I spent two years putting that costume on: It's part of my process and it helps me become the character. I'd find it very strange to think that that it is in could be in else's hands. I think it would be very weird. [Laughing] My blood and sweat is fused into the leather as well!

Is it harder to develop a character on a continuing series like Robin Hood, when you don't know where the character is headed, rather than on an adapted miniseries like North & South, where you already know the entire Elizabeth Gaskell story?
It's more flexible to work on a show like this. I plotted my character biography at the beginning of the show, and it's had to change for series 3 because Gisborne's sister arrives in the story and she brings the truth of their history with her. So I've had to slightly change my biography for Gisborne because it was my creation and now the actual truth is going to be explored. But that was quite an interesting part of the journey for me.

Are there any flashbacks in season 3? Would you be interested in doing a prequel episode for Gisborne?
Funny you should say that: I believe one of the episodes is going to be of that nature. There is going to be a flashback episode which looks into the journey of the Gisborne family, and also how Robin was when they were younger. I think that's one of the ideas that the writers have this year.

Do you know who will be playing your sister?
Yes, we're working together at the moment. It's an actress called Lara Pulver, who's relatively unknown. She's done a lot of theater work. She's absolutely fantastic. The really strange thing is that she has sort of similar features to me, similar coloring, similar eye color. And we sort of think alike and have similar tastes, it's very weird. She's a bit of a chip off the Gisborne block. She's cunning and she's devious. She's incredibly beautiful and very sexy. She's going to be a really interesting ingredient on the show, I think.

How do you feel about the fact that Guy is so evil, yet so beloved at the same time?
I think it could be the thing of loving to hate the bad guys. I suppose the difficulty with a character like this is that I feel sometimes that I've failed to alienate people enough and maybe I've let them into his psyche too much. But I had to try and find a way to forgive him for what he does. I think it stems from the fact that I made him have some kind of faith. It's a private faith. I liked the idea that there was somebody who could go out and slaughter people and then go home and say his prayers. Which perhaps gives him a glimmer of humanity or compassion. It's his failing in the show, but maybe that's what people feel gives him the potential to be redeemed.

What are the pluses and minuses of the role?
From my point of view, I've grown to love the character. I really enjoy him and forgive him. You know, you have to do that when you play a character. So I get quite frustrated when I open a script and the character is constantly humiliated or acting without thought because I know he wouldn't do that and [his motivation] won't be explored in the story. At the moment I'm sort of battling over this with the writers because they set up a very interesting relationship with his sister. It's a very volatile relationship, but I'm striving to make it truthful and I want them to be at loggerheads at each other but I also want there to be some kind of affinity between them. So that's what we're striving for at the moment.

What advice would you give Guy if you had the chance?
Gosh, I don't know. I think he's too far down the road now to give advice to [laughs]. It's like he's on a rollercoaster and he's right at the top. My advice would be, "Get off, get out of the carriage and walk the other way," but he can't, he's got too far to fall now. But if I could have given him advice ten years ago, I would have said: Stay well away from Nottingham. But he's just a bit too far down the line now and I think he has to go over the top. He has to take the fall in order to then be redeemed.

How different was filming MI-5 in comparison to filming Robin Hood? Did you have the same input with your character as you do with Guy?
Yes, I did. I went in and met them quite early on so I had a chance to form the character as they were forming him. It was great to have that input. MI-5 is very different. Guy is very much a separate character from me: He has a very distinctive look, he has a distinctive movement, and a very distinctive voice. And, obviously, Robin Hood is a period piece. It's very away from myself. Whereas with MI-5 it's much closer to my body weight, speed, and sound. I actually find Guy easier because it's a definite departure from myself, but MI-5 is interesting because it's really opened up my political mind.

Can you tell us about your MI-5 character Lucas North?
He was an MI-5 operative who was a predecessor of one of the characters in the original series. He was the best, the top of his field. He basically went to Russia on an operation and was caught and imprisoned for eight years. So he spent eight years in a Russian jail wondering why the British government has abandoned him. There is a spy swap at the beginning of series seven and he is returned, but you're not but you're not quite sure whether he has come back with an agenda or if he is a double agent. He has to fight very hard to get back into the grid and back into the world of MI-5. He's a bit of an outsider. In a way, there are parallels between Lucas and Guy in that respect—they're both on the outside trying desperately to get back in.

Are there any parallels between Guy and Richard III?
Sort of. I'm researching Richard III at the moment. I suppose the biggest parallel is this ambition that is all consuming and will ultimately crush the person that's chasing it. That's been the overriding theme of Guy right from the beginning. It's ambition that started out as "I am fighting for my family name." But once he's had a taste of success, he wants it for himself, despite the fact that he'll say it's for the Gisbornes. He wants it for himself and it's insatiable. I'm hoping to explore the character of Richard III at some point, but I don't know when it's going to happen. I'm interested in the camp that says he wasn't the ruthless, ambitious, child murderer that Shakespeare depicted. I want to explore what it might be like if you grow up never being in line to the thrown and then suddenly you see can see the crown and the path is cleared. You get a taste of the potential of what it might be like. Surely you would dive in and you would run and grab it! I wonder if that's what he really did. Those are the parallels for me really.

What other historical or literary character are you itching to play?
Well, at the moment Richard III is buzzing around in my head. I've always said I'd loved to play Raskolnikov in Crime and Punishment. That was one of my favorite novels. It's already been done, but I'd still quite like to investigate that role.

If you could star in a remake of a classic film, what would it be?
Crikey, that's a tricky one. I tell you what: Kurosawa's Throne of Blood. It's his Macbeth. That's where I'm at at the moment: Something kind of epic, dramatic, and atmospheric. Obviously I wouldn't be Japanese.

Didn't you play Macduff once?
I did, in a BBC television update with James McAvoy, who has gone on to great heights since then. It was a great piece.

What character did you play in Cats?
I was one of those bodies in cats that gets to play lots of characters. I was basically run-and-cover, a swing. I played the Rum Tum Tugger, Gus, Macavity, among a number of different parts.

Are you a dancer?
I'm a pretty good mover, I can get away with it. Cats was my journey to drama school. I did a year on tour and a year in the West End and saved my pennies so that I could go to drama school. But I'm not a bad singer.

Will you sing on film or TV?
I'd love to do a musical, but I don't know when or what. Certainly not Robin Hood: The Musical, but I would love to do something like again, something so completely different.

What is the Havoc Tour?
[Laughing] It's an imaginary rock tour. I got sent a t-shirt by someone who created it. I guess because Guy of Gisborne dressed head-to-toe in leather he looked a bit like a rocker and the Havoc tour was an imaginary medieval rock festival that he fronted. Yes, maybe I'll sing on the Havoc Tour!

Do you think you'll ever try to break into the U.S.?
God, I'd love to. Anything that a) raises my profile and b) is an interesting role to play. You look at some at the television that America is making at the moment, stuff like Damages and Heroes. Brilliant shows like that. I'd love to come over and have a crack at that, but I never seem to get the time.

What's the next thing you have planned?
Well, obviously I'm going to talk to the BBC very seriously and try to convince them to do Richard III with me, but I think I'm probably going to be going straight back to MI-5 after Robin Hood is finished. 

Will you ever do another comedy?
I really hope so. The Vicar of Dibley for me was such a brilliant departure from anything I've done before. Acting in front of live studio audience was such a fantastic experience. And to spend six weeks laughing like that, and really enjoying doing that kind of performance. I feel like I'm in a sort of comedy at the moment because of Keith Allen and the way he plays the Sheriff: I think I'm the stooge and he gets all the comic lines. I'd love to do some more comedy.

What does guy feel when he looks at the Sheriff?
That's quite a hard one to describe. I think he sees a poisoned dwarf whom he absolutely despises but simply cannot live without. It's very interesting because in series 3, the relationship becomes severed and we're pitted against each other. And it's very very difficult for Guy to function without that man. I don't know if that's reciprocated. That's the only way I can describe it: He absolutely despises him but cannot live without him.

If you could have been born during a different time in history, what period would that be?
Well, God, that's tricky one. Every possible period! I would quite like to have been a bit of a lush in the 1920s, but I would have had to been wealthy. I couldn't be poor, because I'd quite like to go around to parties.

Does your nephew play with your Guy of Gisborne action figure?
[Laughing] He hasn't got one! He's got a little Robin Hood hoodie. He puts that on while running in front of the television trying to shoot me.

Who are your acting inspirations?
Oh, I suppose, lots and lots of different people: A bit of De Niro, a bit of James Stewart, a bit of Daniel Day-Lewis.

What's your favorite music group?
At the moment I'm really into Coldplay just because that last album was so good. But I'm really into Keane and Radiohead. The Feeling are great at the moment, I really like that band.

What in British entertainment would you recommend to American anglophiles?
British entertainment? Something that's typically British, you mean? I would say karaoke but that's Japanese.

Or something on U.K. TV that's interesting or was interesting to you. Like, when we asked Simon Pegg, he mentioned Garth Marenghi's Dark Place.
What did he say? God, that's really clever isn't it? Well, I'd say see the Coldplay tour. They're coming to Budapest and I can't wait. It's festival season, isn't it? I'd say getting up to your knees in mud and watching a live rock concert in the pouring rain is a very British thing to do.

Do you wear Wellies?
I tend to be one of those ones in flip-flops who's forgotten it's going to rain.

Which of your past characters do you feel you are the most like?
Probably Vicar of Dibley's Harry Kennedy is the most like myself.

So you're nice, and somewhat like an accountant?
Yeah, I suppose, and we have similar senses of humor.

Do you ever think they'll be a Dibley reunion episode? Will we see Harry and Geraldine with kids?
Do you know what? In the last five minutes of that shoot, Jon Plowman, the head of comedy at the BBC came up to me and said they might just hang on to the set, which they were about to burn. And I was like, why? What do you mean? And he said, "Well nothing, we're just not going to burn the set just yet." I think they've packed it away deep into storage, but I'm sure there's always the possibility they might dig it out. That would be great wouldn't it? A Christmas special that shows where everyone is in a couple of years? I would love it.

Lastly, we were wondering if you could pull some strings at the BBC to get them to definitely air your season of MI-5 over here.
I know! I only just found out that it's not really shown there anymore. That's such a shame. Well, when I talk to them, I will definitely bring that up. I'll say, "Please play it." There also might be a little bit of a wait for Robin Hood series 3, so I hope people are patient.



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Season 3 spoilers!!!! He really is a sweetie.   Bits and Bobs (Vol. 5 1/2): Exclusive 'Robin Hood' scoop from Richard Armitage! Aug 1, 2008, 06:45 PM | by...
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