Posted in: HBO, Max, TV | Tagged: house of the dragon
House of the Dragon Season 3 Welcomes Tommy Flanagan, Dan Fogler
HBO's House of the Dragon has tapped Tommy Flanagan for Ser Roderick Dustin and Dan Fogler for Ser Torrhen Manderly for the third season.
Article Summary
- Tommy Flanagan joins House of the Dragon as Ser Roderick Dustin in Season 3.
- Dan Fogler cast as Ser Torrhen Manderly in House of the Dragon's new season.
- Showrunner Ryan Condal defends adaptation choices for "Blood & Cheese" plot.
- Condal explains timeline changes affecting Maelor's story in House of the Dragon.
A little more than two months after learning that James Norton (HBO's The Nevers) had been tapped to play Ormund Hightower, and with filming on the third season set to begin filming, HBO and showrunner Ryan Condal's House of the Dragon has found its Ser Roderick Dustin, aka "Roddy the Ruin," in Tommy Flanagan (Sons of Anarchy, Gladiator). In addition, Dan Fogler (The Walking Dead, A Complete Unknown) has been tapped for the role of Ser Torrhen Manderly, a knight of House Manderly in the north. "I don't want to say much because I think this is one of those truly memorable 'Game of Thrones' characters, and I'm very excited to bring him into the fold," Condal shared exclusively with EW. "But he is a fixture in Fire & Blood, and I think he's one of those true fan favorites. I'm very, very proud of the role that we've written." As for Flanagan, Condal praised the actor for being "a delight and a thrill," adding, "I'm so excited to see what he's going to do with the character."
And here's a look at the announcement video that was released confirming the start of production on the third season:
House of the Dragon: Condal Defends "Blood & Cheese," Maelor Changes
Conveniently enough, a bonus episode of the show's official podcast dropped in the midst of all of the finger-pointing and posts disappearing from back in September 2024 between the showrunner and George RR Martin, one that saw Condal addressing a number of questions regarding bringing "Fire & Blood" to live-action life. Here's what Condal had to say in defense of the decisions made regarding "Blood & Cheese" and Maelor:
"Blood & Cheese": "I stand behind the adaptation of how the plot unfolded. I have talked about this quite a bit, but I will just say it in plain text: the children that we had in the story were simply too young to be able to construct that narrative exactly as laid out in the book. Period. I have lots of experience working with very young performers. To ask two four-year-olds to play through that level of drama; it's just not a realistic expectation.
There's also a practical element around the things that you can expose young children to on a film set. Yes, you can do clever cutaways, and dummies, and all those things. We wanted this to be a very visceral, subjective experience, not something that was very 'cut-y' and with closeups. And when you start actually breaking apart what happens in that room, and the things that are said, and the things that are done, it became such a challenge to think about and mount that we started looking for—what are the base elements of this story, that Daemon and Rhaenyra send assassins into the Red Keep, and as a result the king's child and heir [is] murdered—and how do we dramatize that in a way that's exciting, and visceral, and horrifying, and do it in the best way possible?"
Losing Maelor: "And Maelor, if he were born yet in this version of the the television timeline, would have been an infant because of the age of Jaehaerys and Jaehaera. Frankly, this goes back to our first season and trying to adapt a story that takes place over 20 years of history instead of a story that takes place over 30 years of history. We had to make some compromises in rendering that story so that we didn't have to recast the whole cast multiple times and really lose people. It was a choice made. It did have a ripple effect, and we decided that we were going to lean into it and try to make it a strength instead of playing it as a weakness."
