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Even Lena Headey Didn't Love Cersei's Ending on 'Game of Thrones'


It turns out even Lena Headey wasn’t thrilled with how the Game of Thrones showrunners wrapped Cersei Lannister’s storyline in the final season of Game of Thrones. For the past eight seasons, we wondered if Cersei would meet her end on the show—but what ultimately happened wasn’t quite what viewers thought would transpire for the once-powerful queen. (After all, the show has dispatched characters major and minor in pretty much every way imaginable.) As viewers know, Cersei dies in her lover/brother Jamie’s arms as King’s Landing crumbles on top of them, which some argue wasn’t befitting of her character. As it turns out, they’re not alone: Headey always wanted Cersei to have a more epic death, too.

“I invested as a viewer, and I have my favorite characters. And I’ve got a few of my own gripes. But I haven’t sat down drunkenly with [showrunners] David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss] yet,” she told The Guardian in an interview published Sunday (July 16). (Those two are the showrunners who adapted Game of Thrones from the books.)

As far as what she’ll say in her tipsy critique, Headey told the Guardian that she already has it planned: “I will say I wanted a better death,” Headey said. “Obviously you dream of your death. You could go in any way on that show. So I was kind of gutted. But I just think they couldn’t have pleased everyone. No matter what they did, I think there was going to be some big comedown from the climb.”

This isn’t the first time Headey has voiced her dissatisfaction with Cersei’s death. Last month, following the series finale, she told Entertainment Weekly, she wanted her character to “have some big piece or fight with somebody.”

Even if Cersei didn’t get the ending she quite deserved, Headey is already considering her next role: The Guardian reports that the massive success of the show—and the acclaim her acting received—has been a huge boost to her career, and that she’s now being “sent scripts in which she is actively interested.” Hopefully, that means we won’t have to wait too long until we see Headey and her talent back in action.



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Lena Headey Wrote the Kindest Message to Emilia Clarke About Her Brain Aneurysms


Game of Thrones star Lena Headey wrote a beautiful, supportive message to her costar Emilia Clarke, who revealed in a New Yorker essay on Thursday (March 21) she had suffered two brain aneurysms while filming the hit HBO show.

“It took me a while to know this woman (there are 64000 of us after all),” Headey posted on Instagram alongside a photo of Clarke. “Not until she spoke to me about her experience did I fully realize the warrior she truly is (MOD for real x209840000) she does really great things for causes that deserve it. She’s kind and determined and funny and aware. #Thursday’s MVP … Here’s to @emilia_clarke ?????⭐️⭐️⭐️?.”

MOD, for uninitiated into Game of Thrones, means Mother of Dragons, the nickname of Clarke’s character on the show.

Lena Headey plays Cersei Lannister on GoT, and Emilia Clarke plays Daenerys. Their characters hardly interact onscreen—they’ve shared only one scene—which is why Headey’s message is particularly exciting.

In her essay, Clarke outlines her emotional journey with the two brain aneurysms, which happened at such busy times in her life and career.

“I lost all hope,” Clarke writes. “I couldn’t look anyone in the eye. There was terrible anxiety, panic attacks. I was raised never to say, ‘It’s not fair’; I was taught to remember that there is always someone who is worse off than you. But, going through this experience for the second time, all hope receded. I felt like a shell of myself. So much so that I now have a hard time remembering those dark days in much detail. My mind has blocked them out. But I do remember being convinced that I wasn’t going to live.”

Read Clarke’s piece in its entirety here. Game of Thrones season eight premieres Sunday, April 14, at 8:00 P.M. ET on HBO.





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'Game of Thrones' Star Lena Headey Says Refusing Harvey Weinstein’s Advances Hurt Her Career


By now, the word’s out about Harvey Weinstein: Actresses’ stories about former Hollywood heavyweight producer allegedly harassing and assaulting them helped catalyze the #MeToo movement’s 2017 shift into high gear. What played out would not only expose and take down Weinstein, who continues to deny the allegations, but many (many) other high-profile men. Now, Lena Headey, who plays ice queen Cersei Lannister on Game of Thrones, has talked in more detail about her experiences with Weinstein, alleging that he hurt her career for a decade.

Headey had previously opened up in an October 2017 series of tweets about her interactions with him. In 2005, she tweeted, he made a suggestive comment to her at the Venice Film Festival, which she laughed off. Some time after, she wrote, he asked her to come up to his hotel room to get a script. Her body, she wrote, “went into high alert,” and Headey said that she spoke up for herself: “I’m not interested in anything other than work, please don’t think I got in here with you for any other reason, nothing is going to happen.” He apparently became “furious,” and when his room key didn’t work, Headey wrote, he walked her back to the elevator, holding her arm tightly and telling her not to speak to anyone about it.

After these incidents, Headey says, she was virtually iced out of her career for almost a decade. She told The Sunday Times that refusing the advances she alleges meant she barely saw any roles from Miramax, the studio Weinstein co-founded.

“After he was discovered to be a slimeball, on a grander scale than me just knowing it, I did start thinking, ‘Fuck, maybe because I didn’t shag him, that’s impacted a decade of my working life,’ because I did two jobs for Miramax before those incidents, and after that there was nothing,” she told the newspaper.

A decade with little to no work is hard on anyone, but luckily Headey landed on her feet with one of the biggest roles on one of the biggest shows on television. Weinstein, on the other hand, has recently lost his defense lawyer and is due back in court March 7 for a pre-trial hearing after being indicted last May on charges of rape. His trial, which now includes five charges of sexual assault, is scheduled to begin in May.





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Lena Waithe Feels 'So Free' After Cutting Her Hair, and I Get It


Lena Waithe is a brilliant black lesbian woman who has proven over and over again that she won’t be outdone or outworked when it comes to making bold moves in film and television. She also happens to be outspoken. Her responses to interviewers and award speeches consistently reaffirm her determination to increase visibility and opportunities for Black LGBTQIA folks, and many other marginalized identities.

At the 2017 Emmys, when she became the first black woman in history to win the award for writing in the comedy category, she said this: “The things that make us different: those are our superpowers. Everyday when you walk out the door, put on your imaginary cape and go out there and conquer the world—because the world would not be as beautiful as it is if we weren’t in it.”

Those words were shared multiple times over various social media platforms, and I smiled to myself every single time I saw them. Even though I should really know better by now, in my mind, Lena Waithe had become the symbol of someone who had already done all of her work. She seemed content to be 100 percent of who she already happened to be, and that was where I wanted to be too. I couldn’t imagine a person could speak truth and encouragement into so many souls at once without being evolved in a certain way, or at least, much further along in their emotional intelligence journey than myself and most people I knew. I forgot, as I often do, that nobody rocks with themselves 100 percent of the time, all the time. I forgot, for a moment, that Lena Waithe is a human being.

Then, she reminded me. On the red carpet for The Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s annual grants banquet, Waithe arrived without her signature locs. In fact, her hair had been cut into a low caesar with the sides faded, and a dope design to top it all off. She looked amazing. It stunned me even more than the rainbow cape she wore to the Met Gala in May, and it took me a second to realize why. When asked how she decided on what seemed like such a dramatic change to her appearance, Waithe replied, “I felt like I was holding onto a piece of femininity that would make the world feel comfortable with who I am.” As the kids say, I felt that.

About a year and a half ago my friend, poet Angel Nafis, called. We missed one another, wanted to hang out, and in this new adult landscape with limited time, we had to make it count. Angel tends to inspire bravery in me. I find it near impossible to be close to someone so ferociously true to their own heart, and not feel compelled to do or be the same. I don’t remember if the original plan was to get tattoos or shave our heads. Either way, we ended up doing both on the same day.

Angel was familiar with our barber. He’d been shaping her up for months. I wasn’t familiar with any barber, or hairdresser, or anyone. I’d never really been able to care enough about my hair to form those kinds of relationships. My hair had been pressed, curled, braided, chemically-straightened, co-washed, worn in protective styles, and everything else, but never because I cared about my hair. I only cared that it was expected of me, and according to the people I knew, an important part of presenting myself to the world as a black woman.

I’m a bisexual woman who will marry a straight cis man in September. The outside of my life does not always seem to match the inside to people who don’t care to know.

I cared about that. Can’t let the whole team down on some personal shit. But what did my hair have to do with being a black woman? Don’t get me wrong. I love how black women recognize hair care and design as an art form, and growing up around women who did so was a beautiful thing to watch. I just didn’t want anybody to do it to me. It took too much time, too much thought, and I wasn’t interested enough to engage. I wasn’t quite obtuse enough to believe my disinterest in my hair made me less of a black woman, but the feelings lingered.

I also got a caught a quick gut check when Lena added this: “I think I thought for a long time, ‘Oh, if I cut my hair, I’ll be a stud, I’ll be—in the gay world, there’s a lot of categories—I’ll be a stud or I’ll be a butch, and I’ve always thought, ‘Well, no, I’m not that, I’m still soft,’ and I said, ‘Oh, I gotta put that down ’cause that’s something that’s outside of me.'” I’m a bisexual woman who will marry a straight cis man in September. The outside of my life does not always seem to match the inside to people who don’t care to know. I worried, for a moment, if cutting my hair wouldn’t be read as “trying too hard” to make match what should never have to. I didn’t want to look like I was trying to prove something, but the thing is…no one one was paying attention to me. No one cared what I did with my hair, and even if they did, it was mine. Why was I considering the hypothetical opinions of strangers who were generally unconcerned with anything I do?

There was really only one point: I did not like having as much hair as I had. I wanted to cut it. And yet, I wavered before my turn. I thought of backing out. Not because that’s what I wanted, but because I knew I would be trying on a version of my truer self, and once I saw her, I would not go back.

Of course, I let the barber cut my hair. I got a low caesar, and my edges lined up. When he was done, and I looked in the mirror, I saw me. More of me. And I was so glad. Lena said cutting her hair made her feel “so free and so happy and so joyful,” her smile easily reaching to her left and right ears. “I really stepped into myself.” While I still believe she is one of the most impressive creators with work available for us to enjoy and learn from these days, I no longer think of her as being beyond or above the work. None of us are. Not even me. I’ll try not to forget again, but when I inevitably do, I hope I’m still paying attention to artists like Lena Waithe who are always finding ways to remind me.

Ashley C. Ford is a writer based in Brooklyn. You can find more of her writing at ashleycford.com or follow her on Twitter @iSmashFizzle.





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Lena Dunham, Sia and More Celebs Went to the Border to Protest the Separation of Migrant Families


For the past week, much of the public has been decrying the Trump administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy, which treats would-be adult migrants at the border as criminal offenders, resulting in the separation of the children accompanying them. Although the White House has stepped back from separating children from parents and, on Saturday, announced protocol for reuniting those separated, questions still remain on how the government plans to put families back together again.

To protest the Trump administration’s zero-tolerance policy, a number of celebrities reportedly aligned with Voto Latino headed to the border over the weekend to rally.

Lena Dunham

“We came to Tornillo, Texas, to show our solidarity with the families who have been separated, the children who are alone, the parents who are grieving and the undocumented Americans who are losing more than I can fathom. Thank you, Tornillo, for showing us a warm border welcome and reminding us that together we rise.”

Jenni Konner

“#endfamilyseparation”

“This is the border. They have closed the pedestrian walkwaybecause of this peaceful rally to #endfamilyseparation. They do not want us to see detention tents. They do not want us to witness this tragedy up close.”

Sia

“Help @votolatino do imperative work to protect and serve our asylum seekers. I will match all donations up to $100k. please RT votolatino.org/donate

Mira Sorvino“TY so much @lenadunham for inviting me on this moving journey of bearing witness at the border. Tho they would not let us pass through, knowing that those children were there on the other side of the barbed wires, in a desert where the heat was easily over 100, made me want to fight even harder to #EndFamilySeparation”

“Looking back on best messages on our way to the #border #tornillo @votolatino to #rally v. #familyseparation #KeepFamiliesTogether I took these at the #FamiliesBelongTogether @familiesbelongtogetherla march a week and a half ago. Now sitting across the bus aisle from @doloreshuerta !!”

Ione Skye

“Rob Reiner speaking at detention center . We need to make sure these kids are not being mistreated. Vote in November. This treatment has zero Tolerance and dignity.”

“Detaining children doesn’t need to represent America. #familiesbelongtogether vote in November donate and pass the information on. It is not over and the policies have to change. They are not breaking laws-Seeking Asylum is not Illegal in America”

Angelique Cabral

“Scenes from today in Tornillo, TX at the Port of Entry. We held a peaceful rally, and yet they still closed the pedestrian walkway; they don’t want us to see the detention camps. Its unfathomable to me. As a human, I’m devastated. As a parent, I’m livid ?? We need to act now. To learn more & join the movement visit stopseparation.org/March ????????????????#FamiliesBelongTogether #EndFamilyDetention”

“So proud to be supporting @votolatino today rallying in Tornillo, TX to bring an end to family detention”

Anna Camp

“Speaking up for children and their families here at the port of entry. #keepfamiliestogetheract #stopseparatingfamilies morality > politics”

Katie Lowes

“They closed the pedestrian gate at the border. Must really not want us to see the detention tents. I wonder why. This is just awful… #keepfamiliestogether”

“Stepping off the bus in Tornillo, TX, the first site where hundreds of refugee children are detained in temporary shelters and separated from their families, to rally with people from all over the US to #keepfamiliestogether.”

Casey Wilson

“In Tornillo, Texas at the border where hundreds of refugee children are being detained in temporary shelters. We are here to bear witness. We are singing and chanting in hopes our voices will reach the tents. I hope they felt our love. #keepfamiliestogether This is not okay. This is not America. If you support Trump know that you are on the wrong side of history.”

Related Stories:

The White House Just Announced a Plan to Reunite Separated Migrant Families

All Your Questions About Trump’s Executive Order on Family Separation, Answered

Trump’s Executive Order Means He Won’t Separate Families at the Border, but He’s Still Detaining Children



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Lena Dunham Speaks Out About Her Breakup With Jack Antonoff


It’s barely been 48 hours since news broke of Lena Dunham and Jack Antonoff’s breakup, but the Girls creator already appears to have reached the final stage of the breakup process: the wise and somewhat jaded “posting inspirational things about love on social media” stage. On Tuesday night Dunham logged on to Instagram Live for a philosophical riff on the transcendental qualities of true love.

“I’m wearing this ring that Jack gave me, and I’ll always wear it, because love is a really cool, powerful, eternal thing, and it doesn’t have to be defined the way we in Western culture define it, as beginnings and ends,” Dunham said in the video, according to E! News. “Things can be ‘You’re a drop of water and you reenter the ocean,'” she added. “Anyway, I really love you all, and I’m really thankful for the support, really thankful for the love.” Earlier on Tuesday the Lenny founder reposted a classic postbreakup #inspirational quote on her Instagram page. “❤️ forever love ❤️” she captioned the “#mindbodygram” repost, which reads, “Starting over is the beautiful moment where you choose yourself.”

E! was the first to report the breakup news, which was confirmed by a rep for both Dunham and Antonoff. “It was mutual,” a source said on Monday, adding that the breakup happened in December. “Jack and Lena were growing apart, and it just made sense for them to end their relationship where it was…. They want the best for each other no matter what. They are both moving on.” The duo started dating in 2012; the last red carpet they walked together was at the 2017 Grammy Awards last January.

Although the pair had been notably absent from each other’s social media posts for the past few months, in October 2017, Dunham penned a heartfelt tribute to the Bleachers frontman for Variety. “It’s safe to say that before Jack my life was full of far fewer sights,” she wrote. “He showed me the importance of making political statements using your public platform. He showed me the joy of collaboration.”

Related: Lena Dunham Is Tired of Talking About Whether Endometriosis Will Keep Her from Having Kids





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