The 23-year-old from the West Country will form a lustful - but highly dangerous - liaison with Armitage in a new production of Arthur Miller’s classic The Crucible, which begins performances at the Old Vic Theatre on June 24.
She will play Abigail Williams, a love-struck girl who persuades god-fearing (and married) John Proctor to ‘lapse’, and then, when he doesn’t want to ‘lapse’ any more, charts a spiteful course for revenge in 17th-century Salem, Massachusetts.
New role: Richard Armitage is to star in a new production of The Crucible
Abigail’s actions set off a hysterical chain reaction in the Puritan village when she accuses Proctor and others of all manner of things, including witchcraft.
Love interest: Samantha Colley, 23, will form a lustful - but highly dangerous - liaison with Richard in the production
Miller’s play was a commentary on the anti-Communist U.S. Congress witch-hunts of the late Forties and early Fifties. But the play still has plenty of relevance, which is why Kevin Spacey, the Old Vic’s artistic director, was so smart to bring it back.
Spacey was also astute to have the piece directed by South African playwright Yael Farber, who won international acclaim for her Strindberg reinvention of Miss Julie, Mies Julie.
Armitage has had what were described to me as ‘several very exciting’ conversations with Ms Farber about how she plans to interpret Miller’s drama. However, he is still in final discussions.
Whatever she said clearly entranced him, because he signed on to do the show not having been on the London stage, or any other for that matter, for 13 years.
Most people will know Armitage from either Robin Hood or Spooks on television. He also played the lead in the BBC’s adaptation of Elizabeth Gaskell’s North And South.
More recently, he has attracted a global fan-base thanks to his performance as Thorin, leader of the company of dwarves, in Peter Jackson’s Hobbit trilogy (the final part, There And Back Again, is out in December).
Middle earth role: Richard as Thorin Oakenshield in The Hobbit:The Desolation Of Smaug
His accuser on stage, Ms Colley, has just graduated after taking a three-year acting course at the Oxford School of Drama. Her appearance in The Crucible will be her first professional job.
But, like Armitage, she has performed in the classics and can match his stage combatant skills: she’s apparently lethal with a rapier.
Just down the road from the Old Vic, at the Young Vic, there’s an electrifying, no-frills version of Miller’s A View From The Bridge, directed by Ivo van Hove, starring Mark Strong - like Armitage, making a stage return after more than a decade away from the boards - alongside Nicola Walker, Phoebe Fox and Luke Norris.
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