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Showing posts with label armitage army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label armitage army. Show all posts
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Richard Armitage: Fans in clamour for actor to become king Wednesday, January 23, 2013 Leicester Mercury Follow By Gemma Peplow
Leicestershire actor Richard Armitage has spoken several times about his interest in King Richard III and ideas to tell his story on the big screen or on the stage.
And his own army of fans from all corners of the world are right behind him.
Roswitha Gerhart, who lives in Munich, Germany, has co-launched an online "support network" for a film or theatre production, and more than 1,100 fans have signed up.
Richard Armitage, who most recently played dwarf Thorin Oakenshield in The Hobbit, was named after the last Plantagenet king, and has spoken about his story in many publications – including the Leicester Mercury's More magazine last month.
During the interview, he said: "I managed to get home and see my parents in Huncote when we finished filming The Hobbit in New Zealand.
"It was just as they were finding the Richard III bones in that car park. I'm excited to hear about the findings of this DNA, I've watched with interest.
"Richard III, now that's a play. I was named after him. My father's a historical fanatic about his character and I've inherited that enthusiasm, but I know by the time I get the chance I'll be too old and too tall to play the role.
"I'd somehow like to realise that part of history."
KING RICHARD ARMITAGE PETITION
READ MORE: http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/Fans-clamour-actor-king/story-17937749-detail/story.html
Labels:
armitage army,
masterpiece. the hobbit,
MI5,
north and south,
Richard Armitage,
robin hood,
Spooks,
thorin,
thorin oakenshield
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Interview: Richard Armitage Talks Thorin, Tolkien, and Being a Leader of Dwarves in THE HOBBIT Saga (TWITCH FILM)
Jason Gorber
For an about-to-be World Famous Dwarf, Richard Armitage wasn't looking too shabby when the man sat down in front of a bunch of eager journalists during a long press day in Toronto. Dressed in a waist coat and proper British slacks, the tall, angular man looked very different than his more hirsute kingly character he plays in The Hobbit saga.
Armitage sat down on a very different throne, this one a plush leather easy chair, seemingly oblivious to the global fame that's about to befall him. Sure, he's got an very vocal "Armitage Army" online, consisting of slews of UK and Anglophilic fans of his TV work, mostly middle aged women, but playing such a major role in Peter Jackson's Hobbit film will certainly take things to a whole new level.
What was the biggest change from episodic television to the massive production like THE HOBBIT?
Well, there's a lot more money! [Laughs] Not in my paycheck, in the production. The amount of people that work on it makes it bigger, but Peter made it feel incredibly intimate. The money buys you more time, so there was much more time to experiment with the character.
It's why I think many actors craving working in film, because you get time to develop your character further, there's time to push yourself further. I felt that Peter allowed me to do that.
On my first day on the set I had to stand up in front of the entire company and speak Māori to a line of people who were giving us a Pōwhiri, which is like a welcoming ceremony to bless the soundstage. I was more terrified of that then actually the filming!
You get on the set and there are 200 people, and behind a curtain are another 200 people on computers, so it's bloody terrifying. But when you get to the nucleus of Pete's set, it's just you and him and your fellow actors, and he keeps it so intimate and personal that he gets rid of the fear.
Once you're inside of the character, especially one of relatively high status as I was, then you're just inside the character. It was important to me to walk on set and have the crew believe that this person could be a king, so I tried to protect that as much as I could.
That speech actually became part of my vocal work. Because I wanted to pitch my voice lower, and create a resonance for the character, I built a program of works, I used Shakespearean speeches to find certain things, but I also used that speech every day. I found there was something in Māori culture that's essential to the feeling of Middle Earth.
READ THE REST OF THE WONDERFUL INTERVIEW HERE: http://twitchfilm.com/2012/12/interview-richard-armitage-talks-thorin-tolkien-and-being-a-leader-of-dwarves-in-the-hobbit-saga.html
For an about-to-be World Famous Dwarf, Richard Armitage wasn't looking too shabby when the man sat down in front of a bunch of eager journalists during a long press day in Toronto. Dressed in a waist coat and proper British slacks, the tall, angular man looked very different than his more hirsute kingly character he plays in The Hobbit saga.
Armitage sat down on a very different throne, this one a plush leather easy chair, seemingly oblivious to the global fame that's about to befall him. Sure, he's got an very vocal "Armitage Army" online, consisting of slews of UK and Anglophilic fans of his TV work, mostly middle aged women, but playing such a major role in Peter Jackson's Hobbit film will certainly take things to a whole new level.
What was the biggest change from episodic television to the massive production like THE HOBBIT?
Well, there's a lot more money! [Laughs] Not in my paycheck, in the production. The amount of people that work on it makes it bigger, but Peter made it feel incredibly intimate. The money buys you more time, so there was much more time to experiment with the character.
It's why I think many actors craving working in film, because you get time to develop your character further, there's time to push yourself further. I felt that Peter allowed me to do that.
On my first day on the set I had to stand up in front of the entire company and speak Māori to a line of people who were giving us a Pōwhiri, which is like a welcoming ceremony to bless the soundstage. I was more terrified of that then actually the filming!
You get on the set and there are 200 people, and behind a curtain are another 200 people on computers, so it's bloody terrifying. But when you get to the nucleus of Pete's set, it's just you and him and your fellow actors, and he keeps it so intimate and personal that he gets rid of the fear.
Once you're inside of the character, especially one of relatively high status as I was, then you're just inside the character. It was important to me to walk on set and have the crew believe that this person could be a king, so I tried to protect that as much as I could.
That speech actually became part of my vocal work. Because I wanted to pitch my voice lower, and create a resonance for the character, I built a program of works, I used Shakespearean speeches to find certain things, but I also used that speech every day. I found there was something in Māori culture that's essential to the feeling of Middle Earth.
READ THE REST OF THE WONDERFUL INTERVIEW HERE: http://twitchfilm.com/2012/12/interview-richard-armitage-talks-thorin-tolkien-and-being-a-leader-of-dwarves-in-the-hobbit-saga.html
Labels:
armitage army,
MI5,
north and south,
Richard Armitage,
robin hood,
Spooks,
The hobbit,
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,
thorin oakenshield
Monday, December 3, 2012
RICHARD ARMITAGE BRINGS A FILM CLIP TO HIS INTERVIEW ON CANADA'S MARILYN DENIS SHOW (COMIC BOOK MOVIE)
Actor Richard Armitage brought a new clip (low-resolution) from Peter Jackson's The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey with him to a recent interview that features his character, Thorin Oakenshield, protecting his group from harm.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=qAZNlPGbD54
Love her question, "How do you play a dwarf at 6'2"?"
READ MORE: http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/nailbiter111/news/?a=70813
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=qAZNlPGbD54
Love her question, "How do you play a dwarf at 6'2"?"
READ MORE: http://www.comicbookmovie.com/fansites/nailbiter111/news/?a=70813
Labels:
armitage army,
canada,
marilyn denis,
Peter Jackson,
Richard Armitage,
The hobbit,
thorin oakenshield
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