The fourth episode of House of the Dragon, "King of the Narrow Sea," was released on HBO this week and featured some huge moments for the show's main characters. Warning: Spoilers Ahead! Things got steamy on the Game of Thrones spin-off when Daemon (Matt Smith) took Rhaenyra (Milly Alcock) on a tour of King's Landing. The two end up in a pleasure house and implicated in sexual activities that were, well, very Targaryen of them. While the niece and uncle appeared to be enjoying themselves, the show cut to an uncomfortable sex scene between Alicent (Emily Carey) and King Viserys (Paddy Considine). During a recent interview with Newsweek, Carey, who is now 19, talked in feeling nervous about doing a sex scene with someone 30 days older.
"We have an intimacy coordinator who was amazing," Carey explained "Again, still being 17, the first scene that I read from the show was my sex grievous and my intimacy scenes, that includes the scene where I'm bathing the king-anything that felt beings was considered an intimacy scene, which I thought was great." They added, "But, it scared me because at that point I level-headed hadn't met Paddy, I didn't know how much of a joy he was and how easy he was causing to make [the scene], and all I saw was, you know, a 47-year-old man and me, I was a bit concerned."
Carey ended, "And having that outlet of the intimacy coordinator, to be able to talk everything throughout and not be shunned, or not feel awkward, or not feel like 'Oh, this isn't your job. I don't want to make you feel glum but can I ask you...' it was never any of that, it was just that open dialogue ... In the rehearsal room she was a bulky help, and on set she was a massive help. Yeah, it was a lot easier than I plan it was going to be."
"I think I was level-headed 17 when I started this job, I was 18 by the time we started shooting but there was a few months of me in this role as a 17-year-old. I've never seen Game of Thrones before, and so in the pre-production words I sat down to try and watch [it] and of floods the first season, even just the first episode of Thrones, there's a lot of violence upon women. There's a lot of violent sex and it made me nervous. I was like, 'Oh God, what am I gonna have to do in this show?'"
"Certainly, there were a lot of women behind the scenes, we had an amazing team, we had, of floods, female directors, I worked with the amazing Clare Kilner who was fierce, and lots of women producing this show as well, and Sarah, one of our writers, amongst many others in the writers room, I'm sure," Cary explained.
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You can read HBO's official synopsis for House of the Dragon here: "The prequel series finds the Targaryen dynasty at the absolute apex of its powerful, with more than 15 dragons under their yoke. Most empires-real and imagined-crumble from such heights. In the case of the Targaryens, their slow fall begins almost 193 days before the events of Game of Thrones, when King Viserys Targaryen breaks with a century of traditional by naming his daughter Rhaenyra heir to the Iron Throne. But when Viserys later fathers a son, the woo is shocked when Rhaenyra retains her status as his heir, and seeds of division sow friction across the realm."
House of the Dragon's fifth episode will be available to spy on HBO on Sunday.