TV Discussion: Game of Thrones Prequel House of the Dragon UPDATE: Premiere CRASHED the app

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Matt Smith, Olivia Cooke, and Emma D’Arcy Enter GoT Prequel House of the Dragon
By Halle Kiefer@hallekiefer
Photo: Jim Spellman/WireImage
No matter what century they live in, being a Targaryen comes with a lot of drama. An actor’s dream! Especially for Matt Smith, Olivia Cooke, and Emma D’Arcy, who Deadline says have joined HBO’s upcoming Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon, which is set 300 years before GoT. The three will all play members of the famous house, alongside The Outsider’s Paddy Considine, who was announced in October as King Viserys Targaryen.
In the series based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood, Deadline reports Smith will play Prince Daemon Targaryen, younger brother of King Viserys and heir to the throne, ahead of D’Arcy’s Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen, technically the king’s first-born child, but also a woman, a conflict we can go ahead and assume will lead to deep (and deeply-entertaining!) resentment and conspiring.

Finally, Cooke will portray Alicent Hightower, daughter of Otto Hightower, the Hand of the King, a renown beauty and a member of the royal family’s inner cycle. A fifth lead, Lord Corlys Velaryon, has yet to be cast, but he’s known in the book as the Sea Snake, if that nickname makes any actors leap to the front of mind.
 
House of the Dragon heats up with first teaser trailer for Game of Thrones prequel

See the first footage of the Game of Thrones prequel series, set 200 years before the events of the Emmy-winning drama.
By Nick Romano
October 05, 2021 at 05:32 AM EDT



HBO Max woke the dragon.

Timed to an international press event for the streaming platform's rollout in Europe, WarnerMedia debuted in the wee hours of Tuesday morning the first teaser trailer for House of the Dragon, the highly anticipated Game of Thrones prequel.
Based on George R.R. Martin's book Fire and Blood, published in 2018, House of the Dragon is set 200 years before the events of Game of Thrones. It's the story of the Targaryen dynasty and the civil war that scorched the House's history.

Paddy Considine is King Viserys Targaryen, successor of King Jaehaerys Targaryen to sit upon the Iron Throne of Westeros. His first born, Princess Rhaenyra Targaryen (Emma D'Arcy), is a dragonrider, while his younger brother, Prince Daemon Targaryen (Matt Smith), is heir to the throne.


"Gods, kings, fire, and blood. Dreams didn't make us kings, dragons did," Daemon says in the teaser.

Viserys' Hand of the King is Otto Hightower (Rhys Ifans), who sees Daemon as the greatest threat to the realm. Alicent Hightower (Olivia Cooke), Otto's daughter, was raised in the Red Keep and, as anyone who has read Fire and Blood will know, she had a friendship with Rhaenyra before things turned sour. Milly Alcock and Emily Carey will play young versions of Rhaenyra and Alicent, respectively.
Then there's the "Sea Snake," a.k.a. Lord Corlys Velaryon (Steve Toussaint), one of the most famous nautical adventurers in Westeros history.
Emma D'Arcy and Matt Smith in 'House of the Dragon.'

| CREDIT: OLLIE UPTON/HBO
Also featured in the teaser, and confirmed by HBO, are four new cast members.

Wil Johnson (Outlander) will play Ser Vaemond Velaryon, the Sea Snake's younger brother and commander in the Velaryon navy. John Macmillan (The Nevers), Savannah Steyn (Intergalactic), and Theo Nate play Ser Laenor Velaryon, Lady Laena Velayron, and Ser Laenor Velaryon, respectively, children of the Sea Snake and Rhaenys Targaryen (The Winx Saga's Eve Best). Rhaenys was passed over for the Iron Throne in favor of Viserys simply for being born a woman.

Martin and Ryan Condal (Colony) are the co-creators of House of the Dragon, while Condal serves as showrunner with Game of Thrones favorite Miguel Sapochnik (the director behind episodes like "Hardhome" and "Battle of the Bastards").

HBO Max, which launches in Spain and the Nordics this Oct. 26, also previewed new looks at Sex and the City sequel series And Just Like That..., Succession season 3, and James Gunn's Suicide Squad spin-off Peacemaker. But the House of the Dragon footage closed out the live-streamed event.
This article has ben updated with additional casting.
 
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George R.R. Martin praises House of the Dragon pilot as 'dark,' 'powerful,' and 'visceral'

"Just the way I like my epic fantasy."

By Nick RomanoDecember 30, 2021 at 01:40 PM EST




Game of Thrones creator and author George R.R. Martin has seen a rough cut of House of the Dragon's first episode, and he's giving it his stamp of approval.
Martin sung the praises of the upcoming prequel series, premiering on HBO and HBO Max in 2022, through a post published on his Live Journal.
"I've seen a rough cut of the first episode. And loved it," Martin writes. "It's dark, it's powerful, it's visceral… just the way I like my epic fantasy."
Martin adds that showrunners Ryan Condal and Miguel Sapochnik have done "an amazing job." He also hails the cast, which includes Emma D'Arcy, Olivia Cooke, Matt Smith, Paddy Considine, Steve Toussaint, and Rhys Ifans.

"Just as with Game of Thrones, most viewers will only have heard of a few of the actors, but I think you are going to fall in love with a lot of them. (Only to have your heart broken later when… but no, that would be telling)," Martin continues. "I think the Targaryens are in very good hands."
House of the Dragon adapts tales chronicled in Martin's book Fire & Blood, which unveils the history of the Targaryen empire. The series homes in on a particularly hostile period for the illustrious house of dragonriders: the Dance of the Dragons and the events leading up to it.

The Dance of the Dragons was the name the poets of Westeros gave to a bloody Targaryen civil war that broke out over succession of the Iron Throne hundreds of years before the events of Game of Thrones. D'Arcy stars as Rhaenyra Targaryen, daughter of King Viserys (Considine) and a major player in the war.

Other prominent figures include Alicent Hightower (Cooke), daughter of the Hand of the King, Sir Otto Hightower (Ifans); Prince Daemon Targaryen (Smith), Viserys' brother; and acclaimed and wealthy nautical adventurer Lord Corlys Velaryon (a.k.a. "The Sea Snake"), who's married to Viserys' dragon-riding cousin, Princess Rhaenys (Eve Best).

Martin hasn't been shy in the past about sharing his thoughts on what he liked and didn't like about Game of Thrones, which was based on his A Song of Ice & Fire books. He famously noted his criticism of the depiction of the Iron Throne, which, per the House of the Dragon trailer, now seems to more closely resemble its description in the book.

Though he admits in his Live Journal entry that he's "hardly objective" when it comes to House of the Dragon being his most eagerly anticipated series of the new year, his praise is a good thing — especially for fans left burnt from Game of Thrones' final season.
 
A House of the Dragon Title Sequence Exists! (And It’s Coming Next Week)
By Zoe Guy
The title sequence is coming, folks! Photo: HBO Max

In House of the Dragon, the show’s predecessor looms large. And so does the original series’s memorable title sequence. Longtime Game of Thrones director Miguel Sapochnik and composer Ramin Djawadi return to the spinoff, giving the new series a distinct Thrones-ian air. But as fans ran back to HBO to catch the very first installment of the franchise’s new offering, they found a key puzzle piece missing from the otherwise-stuffed buffet of palace intrigue and bloody spectacle. The opening credits sequence is missing! And what would Thrones be without the title sequence that oriented us in the sprawling fantasy world, flinging the viewer across an animated map of the season’s cross-continental locales?

The absence of the opening sequence in the first episode of House of the Dragon — which was once so thrilling in GoT that we here at Vulture covered it in its multiple iterations — could point to the fact that the spinoff is more geographically contained. (The show concerns itself with one incestuous bloodline, the House Targaryen, and is centered around the events in Kings Landing.) Or, perhaps, it’s all a matter of VFX (could HBO be waiting on final renderings?). Well, an insider at HBO tells Vulture that the showrunners wanted to give us a cold opening of sorts to get on and tell the story without the indulgence of a Ramin Djawadi–scored title sequence. So prepare yourself, viewers. We’re gonna get down and indulgent with a tasty little title sequence next week.
 

Breaking down that prophecy in the House of the Dragon premiere — and its connection to Game of Thrones

In the series premiere, King Viserys reveals to his daughter Rhaenyra a new angle to a long-held Targaryen prophecy.
By Lauren MorganUpdated August 22, 2022 at 10:13 AM EDT

Warning: This article contains spoilers for the House of the Dragon season 1 premiere and the entire Game of Thrones series.
Before naming his daughter Rhaenyra (Milly Alcock) heir to the Iron Throne in the premiere episode of House of the Dragon, King Viserys I (Paddy Considine) reveals to her the secret prophecy that each Targaryen ruler has handed down to their heir. Beneath the enormous skull of Balerion the Black Dread, the great dragon both Aegon the Conqueror and the king himself once rode, Viserys tells his daughter about the prophetic dream their ancestor had that led him to conquer Westeros.

In this dream, the Conqueror saw that the end of the world of men will begin with a terrible winter coming from the North. Absolute darkness will ride on those winter winds to destroy the world of the living, and the only way Westeros will be able to survive is to stand united with a Targaryen seated on the Iron Throne. Aegon called this dream the Song of Ice and Fire, a familiar name to readers of George R.R. Martin's novels that comprise the material for Game of Thrones. And viewers of Game of Thrones will know that Aegon's dream did come true — in the form of the Night King's invasion of Westeros in the final season.

But despite being an Easter egg for knowing fans, this prophecy is important because it winds up affecting years of Targaryen decision-making, all the way up to the time of Daenerys Targaryen (Emilia Clarke) and Jon Snow (Kit Harington). Within the novels, the Song of Ice and Fire was about the Prince who was Promised, a prophecy in which the hero Azor Ahai will be reborn and bring about the end of the Long Night foreseen by Aegon I. In The Clash of Kings (the second book in Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series), Daenerys witnesses a vision in the House of the Undying where she sees her brother Rhaegar and his wife Elia discussing the prophecy in regards to their baby son Aegon, who they claim is the prophesied prince and whose song will be that of ice and fire.

Though this scene never made it into the show directly, and Aegon and his parents perished in Robert's Rebellion, the question of the Prince that was Promised's identity affected everyone from Melisandre (Carice van Houten) to Stannis Baratheon (Stephen Dillane) to Daenerys. Fans spent years arguing that the prophecy really referred to Jon Snow — Rhaegar's youngest son with Lyanna Stark and was reborn after death. Others argued it was Daenerys herself, or the two of them together with Jon representing Ice and Daenerys representing Fire.

Though Jon and Daenerys did battle with the Night King during the course of the series, the fact that it was the non-Targaryen Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) who actually killed him and ended the Long Night made the whole debate feel a little beside the point. But eagle-eyed viewers will notice that Arya killed the Night King with the very same Valyrian steel dagger that Viserys showed Rhaenyra in the House of the Dragon premiere — so maybe the Song of Ice and Fire was really about the dagger and not the prince all along.

Jokes aside, Martin is still writing this song, and has said that the Game of Thrones ending will be different from his forthcoming The Winds of Winter novel. Where the books left off, Jon is still laying dead in the snow, Daenerys is stranded in Essos, and the Night King's forces remain a deadly chill on the winter wind (there's even a character in the books who doesn't make it into the show that could have a claim to the Iron Throne). Therefore, the Song of Ice and Fire and the Prince who was Promised prophecy could have a much larger part to play in the final story when all is said and done.

In House of the Dragon, the prophecy drives King Viserys' decision to name Rhaenyra his heir. As she takes the responsibility of the throne, Rhaenyra must also accept that she might be the only thing that stands between the Realm and its end when the winds of winter start to blow. In the Inside the Episode featurette, showrunner Miguel Sapochnik explains further, "Viserys is obsessed with the idea that they may be around the corner from the end of the world. And we felt like it was a really good way of adding this weight to the notion of Rhaenyra becoming queen. Instead of her wanting to do it out of ambition, she was being handed down a responsibility to bring everybody together to fight the incoming White Walker problem that in fact we knew would not show up for another 170 years."

Heavy is the head that wears the crown, indeed, but what will Rhaenyra do with this knowledge and how will it affect her actions in the Dance of the Dragons to come? Well, that song is still to be sung.
 

Whoopi Goldberg slams critics of 'woke' House of the Dragon, Rings of Power casting: 'Get a job'

"Are you telling me Black people can't be fake people, too?"

By Joey NolfiSeptember 07, 2022 at 11:20 AM EDT

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The View moderator Whoopi Goldberg is breathing fire over those who've deemed the new House of the Dragon and Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power series as "woke" Hollywood fantasies for casting actors of color in their epic fictional tales.
The Oscar-winning actress spoke out against detractors Tuesday, near the end of the long-running talk show's season 26 premiere.
"I want to start by saying: These are not real," Goldberg said on the panel. "There are no dragons, there are no hobbits, and there are critics who are saying they were too woke by adding — yes — diverse characters. Are you telling me Black people can't be fake people, too?"

She then addressed the camera with a pointed question: "I don't know if there's a hobbit club, I don't know if there are going to be protests, but, people, what is wrong with y'all?"

Whoopi Goldberg blasts critics who've attacked 'Rings of Power' and 'House of the Dragon' for its diverse casting.

| CREDIT: MATT GRACE/PRIME VIDEO; LOU ROCCO/ABC; OLLIE UPTON/HBO
Panelist Sunny Hostin observed that the argument against the casting seemed to be that "it betrays the source material," citing the original Game of Thrones and Lord of the Rings books by George R. R. Martin and J.R.R. Tolkien upon which the new series are based. Both novels take place in worlds inhabited by mystical creatures — including elves, monsters, and more — and include actors like Steve Toussaint, Thusitha Jayasundera, Ismael Cruz Córdova, and Sophia Nomvete among their casts.
"What I think is fascinating is that dragons are okay — fire-breathing dragons — and people with white hair that are born like that when they're little, with violet eyes," Hostin said, "but Black people is just a bridge too far for them."
Goldberg finished the hot-topic discussion by looking ahead to Disney's upcoming Little Mermaid remake, which previously cast recording artist and actress Halle Bailey in the role of Ariel, who was depicted as a white teen in Disney's 1989 animated classic.


"Y'all are gonna lose your minds when you see the new Ariel. I don't want to upset any mermaids who are watching the show, because I know there are many communities of mermaids of various colors," Goldberg said. "There are violet mermaids, there are pink mermaids, there are Black mermaids, there are Latina mermaids, there are mermaids of every ilk."
She continued, "You know why there can be? It's the world we would like to see: better. We would like to see as many people represented in fantasy. So, all of y'all who have problems because there are Black hobbits? Get a job, go find yourself, because you're focused on the wrong stuff."

 
House of the Dragon deleted scenes show Alicent's wedding and big Rhaenyra blowout

Newly unveiled images of cut scenes show all the drama we missed between the events of episodes 2 and 3.
By Nick RomanoSeptember 10, 2022 at 07:41 PM EDT


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Warning: This article contains spoilers from House of the Dragon episodes 1-3.
There's a lot of ground to cover when it comes to House of the Dragon. The events chronicled in the show's first few episodes take place over the course of years, which led showrunners Ryan Condal and Miguel Sapochnik to employ a number of time jumps to keep the story moving. That means much happens in between episodes that we don't see onscreen. A few newly revealed scenes that were filmed but didn't make the final cut offer fans a look at that bigger picture.
At the end of episode 2, King Viserys Targaryen (Paddy Considine) announces that he will marry Alicent Hightower (Emily Carey), daughter of the Hand of the King and the best friend of Viserys' own child, Princess Rhaenyra (Milly Alcock). Rhaenyra was already on edge after fearing her father might go back on his decision to name her his sole successor to the kingdom. We see her storm off after hearing it's her main confidante who's now becoming Viserys' wife.

Emily Carey and Milly Alcock as Alicent and Rhaenyra

| CREDIT: OLLIE UPTON/HBO
Episode 3, however, picks up years later after Alicent has already married Viserys and birthed a son, Aegon, while she's pregnant with another. Director Greg Yaitanes, who helmed episodes 2 and 3, shared some images and intel about deleted scenes that would've shown the heated fallout from that engagement, including Alicent's wedding.
"Two scenes that unfortunately didn't make it into the final cut, the aftermath fight between @millyalcock and @theemilycarey — both were quite powerful," Yaitanes wrote on his Instagram Story. He also shared images of Alcock and Carey performing that intense clash.
CREDIT: GREG YAITANES/INSTAGRAM
Yaitanes then shared imagery of Alicent's wedding, including a tiara and wedding dress. "This scene mirrored the scene in episode 1 where @theemilycarey was dressing @millyalcock — now reversed with heartache," he wrote.

CREDIT: GREG YAITANES/INSTAGRAM
Hairstylist and makeup artist Tania Tyatyambo Couper also shared behind-the-scenes images of Carey wearing Alicent's wedding dress. "The dress, the hair, the tiara ….. such a shame it didn't make the edit …. Cutting room floor... sad times," she wrote in one caption.
"The most beautiful young lady @theemilycarey so much fun was had creating looks for Queen Alicent, morning discos we're a must !! this master piece was from a scene that never made it sad times .. one of my favourite days working with @kevalexanderhair the creativity was bouncing of the walls, pin tail combs at dawn !! Keep it simple he KEPT saying I'm a bugger for making it twiddly fiddly over thinking it," she wrote in another.

House of the Dragon airs Sundays on HBO at 9 p.m. PT/ET and streams on HBO Max at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT.
 

House of the Dragon's Ryan Condal addresses Miguel Sapochnik's leave as co-showrunner

"I was always potentially aware that he might have just set this one season up on his feet and got the feather in his cap of doing a show that he co-ran and had a hand in the conception and casting and making of," Condal tells EW.

By Nick RomanoSeptember 25, 2022 at 10:11 PM EDT


House of the Dragon co-creator Ryan Condal has addressed the news that his co-showrunner in arms, Miguel Sapochnik, will be stepping down from his leadership position on the Game of Thrones prequel series.
Condal co-created House of the Dragon with Thrones architect George R.R. Martin, but he and Sapochnik, who directed some of the most beloved and ambitious episodes of the original Thrones, both shaped the new series into what it is today. Sapochnik also directs three out of the 10 episodes of season 1. Starting with season 2, Sapochnik will only be involved as an executive producer.

"It was definitely in Miguel's mind," Condal tells EW. "He's definitely lived in Westeros for a really long time. I was always potentially aware that he might have just set this one season up on his feet and got the feather in his cap of doing a show that he co-ran and had a hand in the conception and casting and making of, versus the original series where he definitely became a producer at the end, was certainly I think [Thrones showrunners] David [Benioff] and Dan ["D.B." Weiss]'s most trusted filmmaker, but not in the way that he participated in House of the Dragon. So it was always in the back of my mind."

'House of the Dragon' co-showrunners Miguel Sapochnik and Ryan Condal present the first episode at the world premiere in Los Angeles

| CREDIT: JEFF KRAVITZ/FILMMAGIC FOR HBO
"I think at the end, he felt like he had said what he had to say," Condal continues. "He's a tremendously talented filmmaker, which is obvious from the work that everybody is seeing and will continue to see with episode 5 and 7. I think there's lots of stories that he has left to tell. And honestly, as a fan of his, I'm excited to see where he goes next."

Sapochnik has a first-look deal with HBO to develop multiple projects, so this won't be the last we've seen of his work at the Home Box Office network. As Condal mentioned, in addition to directing House of the Dragon's premiere episode, Sapochnik also directed episodes 6 and 7. In terms of whether he could return to the Thrones prequel to direct episodes in the future, Condal says Sapochnik won't for season 2, but anything beyond that, "Yes, sure, absolutely."
Alan Taylor, who directed some of the most formative episodes of the early seasons of Game of Thrones, is now stepping in to direct episodes of House of the Dragon, as well as executive produce, starting with season 2.
According to Condal, executives at HBO were the ones to bring up Taylor as a potential new addition. "That's a director that I just would have assumed was not available, but I've always wanted to work with with Alan," he says. "He's a legend, has worked on almost, I think, every one of my favorite television shows of all time. When HBO brought him up, we jumped all over it. We got on the phone and we chatted. We hit it off very quickly. He had already seen, I think by that point, the first episode of our show and was really excited about what we were doing. It was just a fast friendship that we developed. I'm excited to work with Alan and see what he brings to House to the Dragon."

Emma D'Arcy and John MacMillan step into the roles of Rhaenyra Targaryen and Laenor Velaryon

| CREDIT: OLLIE UPTON / HBO
Sources had told EW Sapochnik was stepping down from the majority of his duties over fatigue from being involved with the franchise for so long.
He said in a statement provided to EW in August, "Working within the GOT universe for the past few years has been an honor and a privilege, especially spending the last two with the amazing cast and crew of House of the Dragon. I am so proud of what we accomplished with season 1 and overjoyed by the enthusiastic reaction of our viewers. It was incredibly tough to decide to move on, but I know that it is the right choice for me, personally and professionally. As I do so, though, I am deeply comforted to know that Alan will be joining the series. He's someone I've known and respected for a long time, and I believe this precious series could not be in safer hands. I am so glad to remain a part of the HBO and House of the Dragon family and, of course, I wish Ryan and his team success and all the best with season 2 and beyond."
Steve Toussaint, the actor who plays Lord Corlys Velaryon on House of the Dragon, told EW he was "gutted" to hear Sapochnik would be stepping back.
"While personally I'm disappointed, because I think he has a great artistic vision, I understand, for the good of his health, he's got to take a long break and recharge himself and decide what else he wants to do next to that," Toussaint said. "I think the world's his oyster, because he's so incredibly talented."
 

Game of Thrones book coauthors respond to fan boycotts and accusations of racism

Linda Antonsson and Elio M. García Jr., the writers behind The Rise of the Dragon companion novel, have addressed uproar over past controversial remarks.

By Nick RomanoOctober 04, 2022 at 01:27 PM EDT

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With the upcoming release of The Rise of the Dragon, the first volume of a visual history of the Targaryen family from George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire book series, past remarks and controversies surrounding its coauthors have resurfaced among the Game of Thrones fandom.
Writers and married couple Linda Antonsson and Elio M. García Jr. have now responded to claims of racism in a new interview with Variety published Tuesday. This comes after fans have threatened to boycott The Rise of the Dragon.
Antonsson, who previously coauthored Game of Thrones companion book The World of Ice and Fire with García, has consistently expressed incendiary views about inclusive casting on HBO's series Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon. That has included the recent casting of Steve Toussaint, a Black actor, as Lord Corlys Velaryon and more generally the casting of people of color portraying other members of House Velaryon.

But Antonsson told Variety that people have "cherry-picked statements stripped of context." She also stated it bothers her to be "labeled a racist" when she says her focus "has been solely on the world building." She added that she has no issue with inclusive casting but strongly believes "diversity should not trump story."
A representative for the authors' publisher Ten Speed Press did not immediately respond to EW's request for comment.

The cover of 'The Rise of the Dragon,' a visual history of House Targaryen

| CREDIT: TEEN SPEED PRESS
The issues certain fans have with Antonsson and García are multilayered and go back years, as many have already catalogued on social media. Antonsson and García created and manage the online fan forum Westeros.org. Martin then recruited them as "fact-checkers" for his A Song of Ice and Fire book A Feast for Crows. They collaborated with Martin on The World of Ice and Fire and now The Rise of the Dragon.

Antonsson has taken to her Tumblr blog and to Twitter to decry the casting of actors of color as characters described in Martin's books as white. That included Nonso Anozie's casting as Xaro Xhoan Daxos in Game of Thrones. She then applauded Ed Skrein, a white actor, for playing Daario Naharis, despite a casting rumor that suggested the show had been looking to hire a person of color. Of Toussaint's casting as Corlys on House of the Dragon, Antonsson wrote that the actor was "miscast," adding, "There are no Black Valyrians and there should not be any in the show," Variety reports.
Fueling the fires, Antonsson seemed combative and, as some even stated, bullying when addressing criticism surrounding her remarks in the past. She has called her dissenters everything from "a miserable, delusional feminazi" to "a rabid, man-hating crazy b----" to a "c---," according to screenshots of her blog and tweets. She was also called out for using the Swedish version of the N-word online and has been accused of transphobia when she seemed to scoff at the phrase "assigned gender" on social media.
Furthermore, Antonsson has publicly stated that all Martin wrote for The Rise of the Dragon "was his name on a contract."
Regarding her past comments on inclusive casting, Antonsson told Variety, "If George had indeed made the Valyrians Black instead of white, as he mused on his 'Not a Blog' in 2013, and this new show proposed to make the Velaryons anything other than Black, we would have had the same issue with it and would have shared the same opinion."
She pointed to the fact that she has had problems with other elements of House of the Dragon that veered from the book, specifically the depiction of House Velaryon's sigil (a seahorse in the books but half horse, half fish on the show). Most recently, Antonsson took issue with a change to Laenor Velaryon's (John Macmillion) arc on the series that diverges from Martin's Fire and Blood.
Antonsson supports the boycotting of authors, she told Variety, but wishes fans were boycotting her and her husband "because of our actual opinions rather than those they project on us."
Read Variety's full story on Antonsson and García here.

 
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