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			 A vast space once stuffed with supermarket foodstuffs has been 
			turned into a television studio, filled with sets recreating the 
			fabled lost city, complete with temples and terracotta-roofed 
			houses, ceremonial bull ring and regal palace. 
 			"Atlantis," which starts on BBC America Saturday, is already a 
			sizable hit in Britain, where it fills the family-viewing weekend 
			slot previously occupied by sword-and-sorcery series "Merlin."
 			"Atlantis" was created by some of the same team as "Merlin," and 
			like that show takes age-old stories and seasons them with humor, 
			thrills and a central bromance.
 			Actor Mark Addy, who plays a less-than-heroic version of Hercules in 
			"Atlantis," says the recipe involves "a lot of heart and a lot of 
			humor and a huge amount of action and adventure."
 			"They wanted it to be epic in scale and in feeling, and that's what 
			they've managed to do," he said during a break on a busy day's 
			filming in August. 			
			
			 
 			"We're doing stuff that you'd only ever see in movies, because it's 
			difficult and it's expensive and it's time-consuming and it's 
			challenging," Addy said of the 13-part series, shot over nine months 
			in Wales and Morocco.
 			"Atlantis" opens with a young man named Jason — played by the 
			strapping, curly haired Jack Donnelly — washing up in the city of 
			Atlantis, disoriented but somehow instantly at home. The Oracle — 
			there's always an oracle — hints at big secrets to be revealed.
 			Jason soon meets brainy, kindly Pythagoras. "The triangle guy?" asks 
			Jason, and indeed it is the ancient philosopher and mathematician, 
			here a young man played by Robert Emms.
 			The third side of the central triangle is Hercules, in the — perhaps 
			surprising — form of Addy, the burly actor who played a 
			steelworker-turned-stripper in "The Full Monty" and King Robert 
			Baratheon in "Game of Thrones."
 			The casting is a sign of the show's flexible approach to the Greek 
			myths. This Hercules has superhuman strength, but he's no bronzed 
			muscleman.
 			"He wasn't strong because he went to the gym, he was strong because 
			he was Zeus's son," Addy explained, reasonably. "Although he was a 
			demigod, I think he's inherited most of his mother's mortal traits. 
			He drinks and gambles and he's a womanizer."
 			The cast includes Sarah Parish as scheming queen Pasiphae, Aiysha 
			Hart as comely princess Ariadne, and Jemima Rooper as Medusa — here 
			a young woman who has yet to become the snake-haired gorgon of 
			legend.
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			 But the show rests on the three main actors, 
			referred to collectively by their fellow actors as "the boys." For the 49-year-old Addy, being one of the boys has 
			been fun — even if hanging out with his 27-year-old co-stars makes 
			him feel "very old."
 			He recalled nipping out for a cigarette during a meal with Emms and 
			hearing a woman at the next table say, "'Your dad's being very 
			polite.' And Rob of course didn't disabuse her."
 			Such mix-ups probably ended as soon as the first episode of 
			"Atlantis" was broadcast in September. The show is watched by 
7 
			million people a week in Britain, and a second season has already 
			been announced. And Donnelly has become something of a heartthrob.
 			On set in August, Donnelly said the feeling that his life was about 
			to change was "amazing and daunting."
 			"It's the best thing that's ever happened to me by a long, long 
			way," said the cheerful actor, looking as bouncily indestructible as 
			his character, who is required to battle bulls, baddies and 
			Minotaurs on a weekly basis, clad in a fetching jerkin.
 			"The first few weeks I was terrified. I was just waiting to get 
			fired. ... I mean, my last job before this was in (comedy show) 
			'Misfits' and I was wearing a white rabbit mask and I had no lines 
			and no one saw my face.
 			"To go from that to this, I suddenly thought, 'I'm not ready.' It has 
			got slightly easier since then." 						
			
			 
 			Emms has a longer CV, including major film roles in "War Horse" and 
			opposite Julia Roberts in "Mirror Mirror." But he said he was also 
			nervous — although that was offset by his family's delight at his 
			new role.
 			"I've played ... some not very nice people, some weirdos," he said. 
			"And my mum's like, 'I'm so pleased you're playing a nice person who 
			doesn't kill anyone.'
 			"She always just wanted me to play a doctor."
 [Associated 
			Press; JILL LAWLESS] Jill Lawless can be 
			reached at 
			http://twitter.com/JillLawless.   Copyright 2013 The Associated 
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