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Samuel Barnett: first the Olympics, now for a run in the West End

The Yorkshire-born actor was a hit in the BBC’s ‘Twenty Twelve’ satire. Now he’s leading the pack in an acclaimed ‘Richard III’

December 6, 2012 11:39
Barnett in the all-male Richard III at the Apollo Theatre. Photo: Simon Annand

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

4 min read

‘Gone are the days of me playing young and innocent,” says Samuel Barnett. This is perhaps more a declaration of hope than fact for the actor who recently played fresh-faced Danny in the fizzing BBC Olympic satire, Twenty Twelve.

Barnett has just finished rehearsing his latest role at London’s Apollo Theatre, and as we sit talking in the pokey upper-circle bar, you get the sense that at 32, his youthful looks may have been a barrier to landing drama’s more grizzled roles.

And yet here he is, looking almost as innocent as he did eight years ago when he created the Jewish role of Posner in Alan Bennett’s all-conquering The History Boys, and now playing Queen Elizabeth, practically the only character with enough steel to stand up to Mark Rylance’s murderous Richard III. Although it cannot go on like this. Not unless Barnett is going to make a career out of playing Shakespeare’s female roles.

“Up until last year, I was playing late teens and men in their early twenties — innocent, raw, angst-ridden. And not only do I not want to play those roles anymore, they take so much energy,” he says with a histrionic groan. Although it must also be pretty exhausting playing a woman whose children and husband have been slaughtered. Not to mention getting into that dress.