Shropshire Star

Alice Morgan back with a vengeance in Luther, promises Ruth Wilson

The actress reunites with Idris Elba in the fifth series of the BBC drama.

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Ruth Wilson

Alice Morgan will be “back with a vengeance” to kill more people in the fifth series of Luther, Ruth Wilson has promised.

The British actress first appeared in the BBC drama in its initial episode in 2010, but fans feared her character Alice was dead at the end of the fourth series.

Wilson said: “We find that Alice isn’t actually dead. Things have all gone a bit wrong, so she’s come back to get Luther’s help.

Ruth Wilson as Alice Morgan (Des Willie/BBC)

“It’s an action packed series. Alice is back with a vengeance. She’s funnier than ever; she’s more lethal than ever and she and Luther get up to some dastardly things.

“For Alice, unlike a lot of the characters that I do, I think it’s about having joy in the scenes and finding the moments of levity and playing around with the scenes that exist on the page. I think it’s about having a freedom to play a bit more.

“She doesn’t feel deeply. Or she doesn’t go there. She’s able to avoid feeling deeply so she doesn’t act with conscience. And it’s quite nice to play.

“It means I don’t have to worry about the subtext of what’s going on underneath her, it’s almost like water off a duck’s back. So it’s quite liberating to play her, a joy to play her.”

The new series reunites Wilson with Idris Elba in the title role of John Luther, and she said: “We have such a rapport and we worked out it’s been almost 10 years since we started the first season.

“We’ve got a shorthand and it just becomes more quirky as we go on. We are very at ease with each other and the scenes become so much more than what is on the page because we can play.”

Elba said the audience will get to know Luther more in the fifth series, adding: “Everything that has gone on before this season is on Luther’s brow when you see him.

“In this season we find him dealing with that and being the best detective he can. We don’t overly explore his personal life until we have to.”

He continued: “This series we have one case across four episodes and it gives the writer Neil Cross an opportunity to zero in on what makes Luther good.

“The crimes in this season are particularly gruesome and very well thought out.

“Because we concentrate one character, one crime throughout the four episodes, we get into detail. But also over the four episodes, there are other storylines that start to show up.

“I definitely feel that this season is dark.”

Luther is on BBC One on January 1 at 9pm.

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