Regina Leader-Post

Leslie sees links to Thrones counterpar­t

- MICHAEL OLIVEIRA THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — She had no previous experience wielding weapons or marching through knee-deep snow across frigid glaciers, but 26-year-old Scottish actress Rose Leslie said it felt pretty natural stepping into the role of Ygritte on Game of Thrones.

The cutthroat competitio­n she’s used to as an actress doesn’t compare to the conniving backstabbi­ng that’s ever-present in George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire fantasy books, which the show is based on, but Leslie neverthele­ss felt a kinship with her tough-asnails character.

“As a young actor kind of starting off in an industry that is so difficult and competitiv­e you’ve got to be strong, there’s got to be an element of ambition there and you’ve got to be strong and determined in your own way,” says Leslie, who’s played strong female characters before — she was the ambitious housemaid Gwen Dawson in the first season of Downton Abbey, who was determined to rise above her station in life and become a secretary.

“What stuck with me with Ygritte was how phenomenal­ly independen­t and fierce she is and she’s a strong, determined young lady in control with every situation.

“So I felt (Ygritte). Of course, you step it up once you do become the character … but it wasn’t difficult stepping into that role, where she is so dominant and powerful and she knows what she wants.”

Ygritte emerged as one of the most compelling new characters of the show’s second season, introduced when she is captured by Jon Snow and other members of the Night’s Watch.

She’s unflinchin­gly ready for death, but when Jon Snow doesn’t have the stomach to kill her, she plots how to turn the tables, bides her time, and eventually does go from captive to captor.

Leslie appreciate­d how multi-dimensiona­l the character is and enjoyed how her Ygritte develops an unlikely relationsh­ip with Jon Snow.

“She has a flip side … she doesn’t take herself too seriously and she can be playful and bounce that off her ruthlessne­ss,” Leslie says.

“But dominantly she is a killer. She is brutal and has been brought up in these harsh surroundin­gs and therefore is harsh and brutal herself.”

Leslie was in Toronto to launch a travelling Game of Thrones exhibit of costumes and props from the show, which runs at the Design Exchange through Saturday.

Leslie was mostly tightlippe­d about the new episodes but did hint that fans can expect even more of the epic action, duplicity and brutality seen in the series thus far.

“I feel it’s going to be the most exciting season, I really do,” she says.

“There’s more danger and I think the momentum is upped.”

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE Canadian Press ?? Actor Rose Leslie promotes an exhibition of items from the television series Game of Thrones in Toronto on March 8.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE Canadian Press Actor Rose Leslie promotes an exhibition of items from the television series Game of Thrones in Toronto on March 8.

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