Los Angeles Times

A teen warrior’s giant moment on ‘Thrones’

Bella Ramsey tells how she helped save the day as the valiant Lyanna Mormont.

- By Meredith Blake

Warning: Spoilers ahead.

Lyanna Mormont, the littlest badass in the Seven Kingdoms, and a teenager who makes grown men cower with a withering glance, got the memorable death she deserved in Sunday’s epic episode of “Game of Thrones.”

The 82-minute episode, appropriat­ely titled “The Long Night,” featured the long-anticipate­d battle between the living and the dead. While most of her peers hid out in the crypt — not exactly a safe move — Lyanna, Lady of Bear Island, bravely fought against the Night King and his army as they set upon Winterfell.

In a moment straight out of the Old Testament, a giant wight (“zombie” to you and me) stormed Winterfell’s gates, scooped up the pint-sized Lyanna, played by Bella Ramsey, 15, and crushed her in its hand. With her last breath, she stabbed the giant in the eye and killed him — for good this time. It was a move nearly replicated later by another teen girl from the North, Arya Stark, who slayed the Night King and saved humanity in the process.

Little Lyanna was one of the few named characters to die in the episode that saw the mass extinction of the Unsullied and Dothraki — as well as a hero’s death for her first cousin and Daenerys protector Ser Jorah Mormont — but wasn’t the Red Wedding-style bloodbath of remaining favorites that many fans expected.

We spoke to Ramsey about her character’s valiant send-off as well as the memes it’s inspired.

How did you react when you read the script and found out what was going to happen to Lyanna?

I was pretty excited. I think it’s a great death. If you’re going to die on “Game of Thrones,” at least die well. There’s been so many deaths over the series so I was very happy to be given the death that I did. It’s heroic, which I’m very grateful for.

Lyanna has become a real fan favorite. Did you expect that?

I was definitely surprised. I didn’t know what to expect. I didn’t know if people were going to like her, hate her, so I’m very pleased that she’s been received how she has. So yes, thank you to all the fans for getting behind her and supporting Lyanna and House Mormont.

With Jorah also dead, the Mormont line is wiped out, isn’t it?

Yeah, that’s the end of House Mormont.

The scene with the giant obviously involved a lot of CG. How was it all filmed?

Basically, I was in this massive claw machine; it was on green screen. I was sitting on this bicycle-seat thing and I was strapped in and I got raised in quite high in the air and this machine did this series of moves — like a simulation, which made it seem like I was being shaken by a giant. Then I had to grab the dragonglas­s dagger out of my belt and stab it into a green polystyren­e ball which was representi­ng the giant’s eye. It was surreal. There was lots of fake blood mixed into that, which was fun.

Just to clarify, did Lyanna die when the giant crushed her or when he fell with her in his hand?

If you listen, you can hear the bones crushing, which is a bit gross. But I think she was already battered before that because obviously he swiped her out the way with his hand. I was in a harness for that and I got pulled sideways onto a crash mat. When I was running toward the giant doing that battle cry, we imagined that I’d broken my ribs and had a broken leg as well. So I think that was the final straw. So I think she did die getting crushed. I like to imagine she took her last breath just after she stabbed him.

What sort of direction did you get?

I was talking to [director] Miguel [Sapochnik] about whether Lyanna would be scared or show her more vulnerable, childlike side. He gave me a great bit of direction. It’s like someone removed her fear gene. It’s like “fear” wasn’t a word in her vocabulary, which was amazing. It gave me a clear picture in her head in how to play the death, just with absolute confidence and sheer determinat­ion. She knew that’s what she had to do and she did it.

Are you allowed to watch the show?

I’ve been watching Season 8. And I’ve watched a bit of Season 7. I’ve not watched the rest of it. I’ll probably watch it all when I’m 18, maybe. There’s a few bits where my mom and dad just stand in front of me.

Between Lyanna and Arya, teenage girls really saved the day.

That was empowering. I hope people take from it to keep going and persist in the battle because she could have easily stayed on the floor and just died. She kept going, kept fighting ’til the end. She has a sheer courage and confidence. Also Arya, she could have easily retreated or could have gone to hide in the crypt, but she went out and fought as well. Just the fact that everybody is as good as each other. Some people may be more physically fitter or stronger than others, when it comes to a battle everyone can fight.

I don’t know if you’re on social media, but there’s been a lot of love for Lyanna online.

I have an official Instagram and Twitter on my mom’s phone. I’m overwhelme­d. I have had a quick look, and I’m overwhelme­d by the response. There’s a great meme which is a lamb with this like death stare. I like that one a lot.

Do you have any prediction­s about who will claim the Iron Throne?

I think it would be cool if Arya did. She killed the Night King, so I think she deserves it. I reckon Daenerys might end up getting it because she’s very powerhungr­y, isn’t she? But I’m rooting for Arya.

“Game of Thrones” airs on Mondays in the U.K. Have you even gotten to watch the episode yet?

I watched it at 2 o’clock in the morning [via simulcast on Sky Atlantic]. I went to bed and my mum woke me up at five to 2 to watch it. I thought we should watch it when it first came out. You only live once, don’t you? Trying to get back to sleep afterward was the hardest bit. Then tonight more of my family are coming over. Not everyone got up at 2 o’clock for obvious reasons. My grandma and my grandpa and sister are coming to watch it with us tonight at 9 o’clock.

Do they have any idea what happens to your character?

They don’t. I feel like I might need to warn my grandma and grandpa.

 ?? Photograph­s by Helen Sloan HBO ?? LYANNA Mormont (Bella Ramsey) places herself in the thick of battle in Episode 3 of “Game of Thrones.”
Photograph­s by Helen Sloan HBO LYANNA Mormont (Bella Ramsey) places herself in the thick of battle in Episode 3 of “Game of Thrones.”
 ??  ?? BRIENNE (Gwendoline Christie) and Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) fight an army of the dead as the living make a stand at Winterfell in “The Long Night.”
BRIENNE (Gwendoline Christie) and Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) fight an army of the dead as the living make a stand at Winterfell in “The Long Night.”

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