Thursday, June 06, 2013

Quote of the Day

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Our pal Sean T. Collins, who does the recaps of A Game of Thrones for Rolling Stone, has also been interviewing the show's actors one after the other, and this week he's made his way to Joe Dempsie, the attractive young gentleman who plays the bastard slash swordsmith Gendry. You may recall we recently gave his scene with the red priestess Meliandre a proper grautitizing? Yeah that was nice. Well I'm tempted to say that Sean asked the following question just for my benefit, but Sean's always made good on demanding equal gender exploitation, bless his soul, so I'm sure this question was for the benefit of the world and not (only) my lonesome.

Sean: This is awkward to bring up, but you're a good-looking guy. I think that's safe to say.

Joe: [Laughs] Thanks, Sean.

Sean: My pleasure! There's a sense that with your character, and then this season also with Robb and Jon and Jamie, that there's now a movement within the show to show off the male characters the way the female characters have been shown off.

Joe: When you have those scenes where you take your tunic or whatever off, people go berserk. I'm curious what that's like as an actor. It's kind of weird, because from my personal point of view, you don't really want to do nudity unless it's appropriate, and unless it's relevant to the storyline and it makes sense to do it in the scene. There's a scene in Season Two where I'm forging a sword with no top on for no apparent reason. It's amazing what a bit of soot and shaving can do for muscle definition, honestly. I didn't recognize that torso.

I think David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss, the showrunners] still try to . . . there is a bit of a responsibility to try and even up the balance a little bit. You can't let the ladies do it all. But I think they do try and keep it within reasonable parameters. That scene where I'm forging the sword, I'm saying that it's gratuitous, but the idea they wanted to convey was that . . . it was more for Arya than anything to do with my character. It was them trying to imply that Arya's becoming a woman now and she's dealing with feelings that she's maybe not experienced before. I think they just want to hint at that – I'm saying "subtly," but . . . [Laughs] But it's not something I want to make a particular habit of. 

When I was cast as Gendry, I didn't have any of the physical attributes the part required. I was astounded that I got the role, to be honest. But David and Dan said, "We need to die his hair black . . . and it'd be great you hit the gym before we start filming." So I was told to get in shape. I suppose you've got to look like you're made of steel for nudity. You've got to get some arms on you. The reaction is not something I pay too much attention to. You don't want to be a torso. You don't want that to be what you're known for. I think if it's overshadowing your acting, you need to up your game a little bit. 
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2 comments:

zyzzyva said...

You've seen Skins (first two seasons), right? Right?
'Cause Joe Dempsie's excellent in it.
As is Nicholas Hoult.
And Hannah Murray (Gilly on Game of Thrones).
Even Dev Patel.

Lars said...

Yes, I second that. The first two seasons of Skins basically make Degrassi looks like shit (and I love Degrassi!). The actors are uniformly cute, but also good actors.