This morning, Sam visited The Chris Evans Breakfast Show to discuss Journey’s End. You can find a few photos in the gallery and listen to a clip from the interview below.




SCREENDAILY – For Sam Claflin, it was seeing Journey’s End on the stage that first ignited his passion to play the role of young First World War officer Captain Stanhope. The Suffolk-born actor was in his second year at London acting school Lamda when students in the graduating year presented the 1928 RC Sherriff play.
“I just remember being completely spellbound,” says Claflin. “Being completely in awe, not only of the performances, but the story and the characters and the relationships and the world that was created. I remember sitting there in the audience thinking, ‘I have to do this play. I have to somehow find a way of doing this professionally.’”
That chance seemed to come when theatre director David Grindley, who had mounted a successful version of the play in 2004, sounded out Claflin about starring in a revival. “We sat in the Groucho, and I was basically swearing, very excited,” recalls the actor. “But we couldn’t. I was in the middle of doing The Hunger Games. There was an array of scheduling conflicts.”
Instead, the 2010 Screen International Star of Tomorrow became attached to a film version, adapted by Simon Reade and produced by Reade and Guy de Beaujeu — who had previously collaborated on the 2012 film version of Michael Morpurgo’s First World War novel Private Peaceful. After two years of rather tentative momentum, the film finally came together for a pre-Christmas shoot in 2016, with Saul Dibb, whose credits include The Duchess and Suite Francaise, in the director’s chair.
Sherriff’s play is set in an officer’s bunker beneath a British trench in northern France in the spring of 1918. The men of C-company, commanded by Stanhope, are in the front line, and braced for an imminent German attack. The battle-weary Stanhope hits the whisky bottle to get him through each night, and suffers shame and angry self-loathing when his degeneration is witnessed by teenage officer Raleigh (Asa Butterfield), a younger boy who idolised him at school and who is placed into the company for his very first posting. Reade in fact based his adaptation partly on Sherriff’s later novel version, which opens out the action beyond the dugout without sacrificing its claustrophobic essence.
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Yesterday (November 24), Sam attended the Audi A8 Launch at Cowdray House in Midhurst, England. It was great to see him out! He was seen with his Their Finest co-star, Gemma Arteron. Check out photos from the event in the gallery.
On October 6, Sam attended the premiere of Journey’s End at the BFI London Film Festival! It was so great to see Sam out. He looked so handsome. High quality photos have been added to the gallery, enjoy!
Last night, Sam attended the World Premiere of Transformers: The Last Knight in London, England to support his beautiful wife, Laura Haddock. The couple looked beautiful and had a bunch of cute photos taken of them. The gallery has now been updated with HQ photos from the premiere, enjoy!
Tonight was the world premiere of My Cousin Rachel in London, England. I have updated the gallery with HQ photos from the premiere. Enjoy!
Be sure you’re following us on twitter at @samclaflincom to stay updated incase of any more additions!
Earlier this morning, Sam made an appearance on Lorraine with My Cousin Rachel co-star, Rachel Weisz. You can check out high quality photos from their appearance on the talk show in the gallery as well as the interview below!
The release of My Cousin Rachel is getting closer! I have added new promotional photos, production stills, and a behind the scenes photo to the gallery. Thank you to my friend Kaci at Jimmi Simpson Fan for help with some photos!
A few new production stills for Sam’s upcoming film My Cousin Rachel have been released. Check them out in the gallery!