Ah, the way he and I could change the world together! And he sure can kiss… I just had to pick a character portrayed by Richard Armitage and I considered Harry Kennedy from The Vicar of Dibley because he just feels so familiar, like I could know him in real life, or John Porter from Strike Back, a tough guy who can think for himself, but in the end I would just go for John Thornton. OK, on to the challenge: which 7 fictional characters am I so in love with that I could marry them?ġ. So, actors can not be completely ignored and characters played by my favourite actors are naturally on this list. I know actors of course do influence my choice because favourite characters lead to favourite actors for me and vice versa. The rule is that it’s all about the character and not about the actor who portrays him (all men, in my case). I’m always one to fantasize, so I figured I’d just jump in and join the challenge as well. Nell participated in a challenge on her blog to name 7 fictional characters that she would marry on the spot (this is originally a challenge from another German blogger). RA Bulgaria on Twitte r found the following picture of Richard Armitage as Quart, filming today in Seville… His nails were well kept, and he wore an elegant watch and simple silver cufflinks. Very tall, slim, sure of himself, he looked calmly at the guard. He stood politely before the guard and searched amongst the various credit cards in his wallet for his ID card. Anyway, despite grey hair cut short like a soldier’s, the man looked too young to be a prelate. Anne’s, in comfortable chauffeur-driven cars. They entered the Vatican palace by another gate, St. They wore a cross, a purple trim or a ring at the very least, and they definitely didn’t arrive on foot in the rain. But neither was the visitor a high-ranking member of the Curia, a prelate or monsignor. Definitely not, the guard seemed to be thinking, one of the grey bagarozzi – the officials of the complex Vatican bureaucracy who passed through every day. He stared at Quart’s well-cut suit, matching black silk shirt with a Roman collar, and his fine, handmade leather shoes. The man, tall and strong with a crew cut, was wearing the red, yellow, and blue-striped Renaissance uniform and black beret of the Swiss Guard. As he walked up to the Portone di Bronzo, he saw the sentry standing with his halberd in the gloomy marble-and-granite corridor and preparing to ask for his identification. Peter’s Square, so Quart had to skirt the square, taking shelter under Bernini’s colonnade. An area of low pressure was moving towards the eastern Mediterranean and that morning it was raining on St. “ At the beginning of May, Lorenzo Quart received the order that would take him to Seville. A post shared by Richard Armitage beginning of the book The Seville Communion describes Richard’s character Lorenzo Quart like this:
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