Paddy Considine knows his House of the Dragon king is no Ned Stark

[Ed. note: This post contains spoilers for Fire & Blood, which, by nature, will spoil later events in House of the Dragon. It also discusses the pilot episode of House in detail. Ye be warned.]

King Viserys, first of his name, isn’t going through the best time when we meet him in HBO’s House of the Dragon. Though he was eagerly anticipating the birth of a new son and heir, he quickly finds himself mourning the newborn’s death alongside that of his wife, who died in childbirth (more on that later). Shortly after that, he believes himself betrayed by his brother, who spoke callously about the queen’s death. Viserys can’t stop the torrent from pouring down when it rains.

Of course, he’s not around for very long. Viserys’ reign ends relatively quickly in Fire & BloodGeorge R.R. Martin wrote the prequel book, titled. Martin Houseis the basis. Viserys is the Ned Stark Slot in a strange way: A first-season father who wants to make right with his children and leave behind a terrible mess for them both and the realm.

Paddy Considine, who plays Viserys, is acutely aware that the connection is there, and doesn’t look great for his Targaryen ruler.

“Ned Stark and what Sean [Bean] did was sort of in my head as I played this,” Considine tells Polygon. “It was sort of part of the makeup for me, of Viserys. He’s not a simple man, Viserys, and I think the situations around him create complications for him.”

Ned Stark execution season 1 episode 1 game of thrones

Photo: Helen Sloan/HBO

Viserys, fifth Targaryen ruler who sits upon the Iron Throne as the fifth Targaryen ruler, is out of touch both with the needs of the world and also acutely aware how he fails in providing them. In a series marked by people born into power who only crave more of it, Viserys takes the throne in a time of relative stability — and as a consequence, power is literally nothing but trouble for him. He’s a peacetime king who’s keen to keep it that way, even at the cost of burying growing problems (see: Lord Corlys’ council presentation on the Triarchy). By the time his wife, Aemma, dies in childbirth — along with his newborn son, Baelon — the fissures of the realm have started to crack Viserys’ inner world as well.

“I think all Viserys ever wanted to do was make the right decision. And you can’t do that,” Considine says. “You can’t please everybody, as a person. However, a ruler is a special case. […] He’s just somebody who genuinely wants to serve the people as best as he can, but that world just will not allow for it.”

That’s not to say he’s progressive. For his actions during the pilot episode, that’s all you can do for him. House of the DragonHe killed his wife during childbirth believing she would die. HoweverHe might even be able save his son. Having ascended to power past his cousin Rhaenys sheerly because he was a man and she wasn’t, Viserys has led a life full of privilege because of the patriarchy he lives in and does not question.

“There is a lot of misogyny within that world and in that kingdom, but it’s not — you can’t bring your modern day ideas to a character that lives in an ancient world,” Considine says of his “Father of Daughters.” “That’s the way of the world at that time. And I don’t think Viserys names Rhaenyra his heir for any progressive thinking reasons. It’s not that, it wouldn’t be true of the world.”

Viserys sitting at his council table with his council around the table and a guard behind him at the window. His daughter is pouring him some wine and he’s looking at her

Photo: Ollie Upton/HBO

Although Ned Stark clearly benefited from the same system as him, his virtues and high moral code made them more influential, even when they were acting in a somewhat foolish way. Ned Stark was incorruptible and determined, no matter whether he was correct or not. Viserys seems less secure than he is in himself. Even his grand moment of innovation with declaring Rhaenyra the heir to the throne is something Considine reads as more akin to grief: He loves her, he trusts her, and she’s the last remnant of the “love of his life.”

The big win for Westeros Feminism is now twisted. Rhaenyra gets a target put on her back, and a life she’s not (in one reading of the pilot, at least) all too certain she wants. And Viserys — well, he believes he’s just cursed another person he loves with the ultimate burden, power.

“Having watched [Game of Thrones]This seems to be the reason most people were driven. And it corrupts people,” Considine says. “But it corrupts Viserys in a different way. It doesn’t corrupt his morals, but the burden of it becomes such that he starts to kind of disintegrate. […] It’s not the power that corrupts him. It’s the responsibility that destroys him.”

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