Friday 16 December 2011, 12:55
As the fourth series of Merlin draws to a close I find it hard to believe it's almost three years since I auditioned for the part of Sir Leon.
I had 24 hours' notice and I'd missed the first series as I was working when it came out. So I bought the DVD and watched as many episodes as I could in the hours leading up to the casting.
I instantly loved the show and really wanted to be a part of it which made the audition even more nerve wracking - partly because I might get to fulfil my childhood dream of being a knight!
Sir Leon started off as a very small role. I was only meant to be in one scene jousting Arthur, but at the read-through I was given a couple more lines. I arrived on the first day of filming series two, having learned my line for that day - "The King commands your presence immediately" - and when it came to my first take I fluffed it.
I managed to get it right the next take, despite my heart pounding and all colour draining from my face. There was no way I thought that two years later I would still be in the show.
I feel immensely lucky and grateful to the producers for making Sir Leon such an integral part of Camelot. I used to say Sir Leon was the Gunther of Camelot. Gunther worked at the coffee shop in Friends and would pop up sporadically in episodes like I did in series two and three. After series four I think I may have finally surpassed Gunther!
I'd describe Leon now as the rock of Arthur's Round Table of Knights, a real A* pupil of the Camelot School, a prefect - he does everything well and to the book.
He's diced with death on a number of occasions but he always manages to bounce back unscathed! I should probably thank the druids for letting him drink from the cup of life.
Leon's been wounded in many a battle, incinerated by the Great Dragon and has still managed to return to Camelot without so much as a scar. Thank goodness he's such an incredible fighter and that he has sleeves on his chain mail - if he was dressed like Percival he might not have been so lucky!
People always ask whether the chain mail we wear is heavy. It's lighter than it would have been hundreds of years ago, but it gets weighty by the end of the day.
Elyan (Adetomiwa Edun), Sir Leon (Rupert Young), Sir Percival (Tom Hopper), Lancelot (Santiago Cabrera) and Gwaine (Eoin Maken).
The most annoying thing is that it gets filthy so when you take it off, your neck is grey, as are your hands. I have so many books I've read on set which have grey hand marks all over them!
Chain mail also conducts heat and cold, so if it's a boiling day you roast and if it's freezing you freeze too - but we are Knights, after all, so I think we can live with it.
My favourite scenes to film are the big fight sequences.
Every move is carefully rehearsed and I trained in stage combat at drama school so I'm quick at picking up the routines. The stunt coordinators are fantastic, it's their expertise that makes us look so great on screen.
I remember filming the battle with the skeletons last year and having to learn a fight with the stunt coordinator. We were tussling together and then he stepped out and they filmed me fighting nobody, but pretending there was someone there.
I felt very stupid doing the moves and making all these battle cries against the thin air. I was convinced it was all a wind up to make me look silly but of course when the Bafta-winning special effects team put their magic to it I was fighting a skeleton and it looked incredible.
This Christmas I'll be celebrating with my family and, of course, will be tuning in to see the Merlin grand finale on Christmas Eve.
It is so exciting to be concluding the series the night before Christmas. My favourite episode to watch so far this series has been Lancelot du Lac as it was so exciting and dramatic but I have a feeling episode 13 is going to go out with a bang... I can't wait!
Rupert Young plays Sir Leon in Merlin.
Merlin continues on BBC One and BBC One HD on Saturday, 17 December at 8.05pm. It is repeated on CBBC, BBC Three and BBC HD. For all programme times, please see the upcoming episodes page.
The final episode is on BBC One and BBC One HD on Saturday, 24 December at 8pm.
Comments made by writers on the BBC TV blog are their own opinions and not necessarily those of the BBC.
All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
Tuesday 13 December 2011, 10:43
Wednesday 21 December 2011, 10:00
Comment number 1.
MistyJ18th December 2011 - 7:47
This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.
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Comment number 2.
LadyJasmine18th December 2011 - 13:33
I always find it very interesting to hear how an actor came to play a certain character and would like to thank Rupert Young for sharing his story!
So, Rupert, should you come back here - thank you so much for this, and for the joy I have when I see Sir Leon on screen. In your scenes you bring the kind of authentically emotional facet to his character that make him the kind of man I'd like to have at my side when in trouble.
Sir Leon is one of my favourite knights of the round table, and - to my mind - the one who would be able to hold it all together, should a major crisis ever befall the knights...
I'm sad that this series is coming to an end next week, and I will ardently await the start of the fifth series.
Wishing you, and everyone of cast and crew all the best and a very happy Christmas.
Many blessings from this fan.
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Comment number 3.
Sino18th December 2011 - 14:30
Thank you Rupert. We experience different connection with people on screen, in person and in writing. You write simply yet thoughtfully; genuinely yet so carefully (well) - crafted. Not unlike the way you play Sir Leon – and exactly how you set out to achieve?! If Merlin is magic; Arthur, courage; Sir Leon, faithful though all knights are loyal. Yes, you have surpassed Gunther or whoever (not the ‘Friends’ generation) because you are the rock of Camelot, me think. My mother sensed the ‘authenticity search’ factor in you, in person when my family and I (the Eurasian boy) met you and the others in France, at the lobby, at breakfast and at Pierrefonds, albeit briefly. Yes, ‘Lancelot du Lac’ is also our favourite episode so far though I do hope to see Aithusa again and Merlin S4 grand finale concludes in the UK on Christmas Eve, my birthday so can’t wait! Hi to the others and looking forward to S5 too!
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Comment number 4.
Sandy Notman19th December 2011 - 11:26
I have watched "Merlin" since it began and now I am 70, I still watch and enjoy it. I enjoy fantasy! I would love to know where it is filmed as I live in France. Well done to all.
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Comment number 5.
Twonko20th December 2011 - 20:54
Camelot......Camelot......It's only a model.
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