Esme Bianco: When I Died on Game of Thrones

In honor of the eighth and final season of Game of Thrones, IGN is taking a look back at some of the iconic characters who’ve fallen along the way, and the lasting impact they had on the story. These heroes and villains may not have made it to the end of the road, but their lives weren’t in vain – they stand as a fitting reminder that when you play the game of thrones, you win, or you die.

Despite being a character created for the show, Ros managed to do pretty well for herself over the course of the three seasons she lived on Game of Thrones. She climbed her way up from a brothel in the North near Winterfell to the corridors of power in King’s Landing, working for master manipulators Littlefinger and Varys to influence the politics of the Seven Kingdoms.

Of course, this is a series reflecting on characters who had memorable deaths, and despite her steep ascent, Ros’s journey ended with arguably one of the most horrific murders on Game of Thrones, at the hands of the sadistic King Joffrey. Below, Esme Bianco looks back on her wily character’s rise and fall in Chapter 4 of our retrospective series, “When I Died on Game of Thrones.”

What do you remember about your death scene? 

The death scene sucked because it was my death scene, but it was just a long, hot … it actually wasn’t that long a day, but it felt long because I had prosthetics before we started shooting, and then being on set and having to hold that position of hanging from my wrists and not being able to move is really taxing, actually physically a lot harder than I expected to be. So that day was tough, and it was sad, and it was weird. It was a weird way to go, and I was really mad about that. I mean, of all of the people to kill me, the fact that Joffrey killed me is seriously not okay.

But… I recently had dinner with another one of the writers, and he told me about some of the other ideas that got floated for how Ros would meet her grisly end, and actually, the end that I got is better than the alternatives. I’m just gonna put it that way. The death I got, actually, maybe wasn’t that bad in comparison.

When people approach you to talk about Game of Thrones, what do they usually ask about?

Usually, I get asked about my theory of who’s gonna sit on the Iron Throne – if I know who’s going to sit on the Iron Throne. I mean, of course I don’t. What it was like doing nude scenes, get asked that a lot. Did I enjoy being on the show? Duh, yeah! Was it fun being on the show? Duh, yeah! Which character I liked the most, who I enjoyed working with the most, a lot of questions. There’s not generally one question. There’s generally a whole string of questions.


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