#the blonde symbol of liberal colonialism.
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nothing made me more disillusioned in recent years about how fandom treats women than playing disco elysium, seeing people post about it while i was playing, and waiting for this guy to show up everyone was obsessed with and shipping harry with and making angsty art about because clearly he showed up later in the game and he and harry had History and i know heâs the guy in disguise in the whirling-in-rags but heâs gotta become more prominent. then i get to the end of the game and he has one meaningful conversation with harry and kim and thatâs it.
i saw so much fanart of this asshole who arguably has less screen time than any woman relevant to the plot of the game that i thought heâd become a major character. sure heâs kinda interesting but klaasje, ruby, elizabeth, even lena the cryptozoologistâs wife and the novelty dicemaker have more compelling dialogue than him. there are so many insanely good characters in this game and yâall can only post about the men you want to ship. itâs insane
#cricket chirps#disco elysium#jean vicquemare#harry dubois#klaasje amandou#following the de tag is just post after post of jean or jean + kimharry or kimharry where are the women? this game is not lacking in women#i also think itâs telling that the only widely fanarted woman in the game is harryâs fictionalized idealized projection of his ex wife onto#the blonde symbol of liberal colonialism.#but w/e
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Press/Gallery: Emilia Clarke Solo Flight
 VANITY FAIR â It may be another year before Daenerys Targaryen appears on HBO, but Emilia Clarke has wrapped up shooting for the final season of Game of Thrones and is prepared for the big screen.
 On a rainy April afternoon, Emilia Clarke enters the bright, airy Egyptian galleries of the Metropolitan Museum of Art the way so many movie-lovers before her have: quoting Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally. Adopting the unsourceable accent Crystal uses opposite Meg Ryan in a famously improvised scene filmed in this very room, Clarke starts stuttering, âPah-pah-paprikash.â Our amused if bewildered guide, too young to get the reference, adds the 1989 rom-com to her list of movie recommendations from Clarke, who has already gushed about the 2017 religious drama Novitiate. Chuckling over this unlikely double feature, Clarke assures her, âYou have two incredible movies coming your way.â
 One reference the guide does get: Game of Thrones, the HBO juggernaut which stars Clarke as its most unstoppable heroine, Daenerys Targaryen. In fact, the very tour weâre taking, put together by a company called Museum Hack, is based on the series, and offers a fan-friendly survey of the sometimes inscrutable displays of the Met. You donât have to be an art historian (our guide is an aspiring actress) to understand what Greek fire, Damascus blades, heraldry, mutilated men, samurai kamon, the dragon-born St. Margaret of Antioch, and an early female pharaoh have to do with wildfire, Valyrian steel, house words, and Clarkeâs world-famous alter ego.
And yet, despite her fame, Clarke has managed to spend a full half-hour in the museum sponging up our guideâs trivia without being spotted. For years, Clarkeâs brown hair let her hide in plain sight, but she recently bleached it an icy Targaryen blond. So, why the invisibility? Maybe itâs her height. âWe both have a thing about our stature not quite being what people expect,â says her co-star Kit Harington, who, at five feet eight, has six inches on Clarke. Maybe itâs her outfitâthe gray overcoat, cream sweater, and jeans are a far cry from the cloaks and armor of Thrones. Or maybe itâs her bright, decidedly non-intimidating personality. âWhen Iâm goofing around with my pals, Iâm unrecognizable,â she says. Harington calls Clarkeâs humor ânaughty,â and itâs certainly true that her informal, expletive-laced banter is a far cry from Daenerysâs imperious tones. âSometimes, if Iâm in a really bad mood,â Clarke notes, âpeople are like, âKhaleesi!â â
 Finally, the spell of anonymity breaks, thanks to a display of competitiveness worthy of Game of Thrones. Our guide has challenged us to photograph as many birds and dragons as we can find in the paintings and sculptures on the tour, and Clarke is approaching the task with her usual effervescent zeal. Standing in the shadow of a stone Hatshepsut, one of patriarchal Egyptâs first female pharaohs, she triumphantly displays one of the winged targets she has captured on her phone. âThis little birdie: Boom!â she shouts, her voice ricocheting off the stone walls. A pair of young men look over, then descend, and, in thick French accents, ask for a photo. Clarkeâs triumphant grin tightens into a polite, distant smile.
 There it is: the face of Daenerys of the House Targaryen, the First of Her Name, the Unburnt, Queen of the Andals, the Rhoynar, and the First Men, Khaleesi of the Great Grass Sea, Protector of the Seven Kingdoms, Breaker of Chains and Mother of Dragons, who, over the course of seven seasons, has climbed from powerless pawn to resolute conqueror, forcing one rival after another to âbend the kneeâ or burn. As Daenerys has risen, so has Clarke, morphing from a struggling actress and part-time cater waiter to an international superstar and symbol of feminine fierceness. That journey is âimportant and inspiringâparticularly now, in our climate,â says her close friend Rose Leslie, who played the wildling warrior Ygritte in early seasons of Game of Thrones. âSheâs at the forefront of representing independent women.â
 We still donât know if, as many expect, Daenerys Targaryen will win the right to rule the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros, but we can be assured that Emilia Clarke will hang up her platinum wig for good when Game of Thrones ends its eight-season run, in 2019. Thereâs still a lot of filming and post-production work to be done, but Clarke has already shot her characterâs final on-screen moments. âIt fucked me up,â she says. âKnowing that is going to be a lasting flavor in someoneâs mouth of what Daenerys is . . .â
 Clarke has good reason to feel unsettled. Letting go of a culture-defining television role can be liberating, to be sure, but it can also be deflatingâor worse. Jon Hamm may always be seen as Don Draper; Sarah Michelle Gellar is forever Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Jennifer Aniston will never not be Rachel. Fortunately, Clarke approaches this pivotal transition with a stubborn insistence on behaving like a normal, grounded human being. And her upcoming credits suggest that sheâs greatly in demand beyond Westeros.
 This month, Clarke, a self-described âachievement junkie,â joins the rapidly expanding Star Wars universe in Solo, a highly scrutinized origin story for Harrison Fordâs Han Solo. Her well-honed gift for concealing every detail about her workââEverything in my life is a spoiler,â she saysâhelped her get into character. Director Ron Howard, a Game of Thrones fan, explains that Qiâra, Han Soloâs childhood friend turned unreliable ally, is secretive, slippery, and morally questionableââa much different sort of a characterâ from Daenerys.
 If Solo becomes a major hit, it will give Clarke a rare chance to leap cleanly from one spectacularly successful genre franchise to another. But even if it doesnât, she has no shortage of options. An active participant in Timeâs Up, she has ambitious plans to write and produce her own materialâand create new opportunities for other women in the industry. Discussing those issues, she begins to sound more like the fiery Daenerys. âIt becomes harder to separate you from the role when youâve been with it so long,â she admits.
 Eight years ago, Dan Weiss and David Benioff were in trouble. Their pilot for Game of Thrones, an adaptation of George R. R. Martinâs popular A Song of Ice and Fire book series, was a disaster. Along with re-shoots, the pair were looking to re-cast a few key roles, including the pivotal part of Daenerys Targaryen. Tall, willowy, and fair-haired, Tamzin Merchant, the actress originally cast as Khaleesi, was a far more conventional match for the character on the page. The second time around, Weiss and Benioff took a fresh look at the character.
 âEmilia was the only person we sawâand we saw hundredsâwho could carry the full range that Daenerys required,â the pair explained in tandem via e-mail. âYoung actors arenât often asked to play a combination of Joan of Arc, Lawrence of Arabia, and Napoleon.â
 When Clarke started on the series, Daenerys was downtrodden, occasionally objectified, and stranded in a subplot that kept the character geographically distant from the main story and the actress isolated from most of her co-stars. âI was cut off from the rest of the cast,â Clarke says. Over the years, as the famously cutthroat Thrones has thinned its sprawling ensemble, Clarke has risen in the ranks, snagging the showâs flashiest, most empowering moments.
 In an era when network and streaming platforms alike are struggling to get anyone to tune in, Game of Thrones has become one of the last surviving holdovers from the must-see TV era. For a handful of weeks every year, HBO owns Sunday nights, with devotees watching live to avoid spoilers at the office Monday morning. Clearing its own very high ratings bar, Thrones commanded an average of 32.8 million viewers in its 2017 season. Its 38 wins make it the most-awarded scripted-TV series in Emmy history.
 That glaring spotlight has made Daenerys a cultural touchstoneânot to mention a costume-party staple, with Madonna, Katy Perry, KhloĂŠ Kardashian, and Kristen Bell among her many famous impersonators. At a recent charity auction, Brad Pitt offered six figures to spend an evening with Clarke and Harington, only to be outbid. Last year, Daenerys finally powered into the heart of the series, earning long-awaited screen time with Harington and the rest of the surviving stars. Clarke, who has been nominated three times for best supporting actress at the Emmys, may soon be gunning for lead honors. âEverything in my life is a spoiler,â Clarke says.
 Clarkeâs upbringing in the bucolic countryside an hour outside of London couldnât be farther from the dysfunctional family dynamics that forged the orphaned Daenerys. Emiliaâs mother, Jennifer, is a businesswoman who currently runs the Anima Foundation, a charity aimed at raising awareness of specialty brain-injury care, and her father, Peter, was a theatrical sound engineer who prized education above all else. âYour bookshelf should be bigger than your TV,â he liked to remind Emilia and her older brother, Bennett. âMy mum, my brother, my dad, and I would sit around a table, and my happiest place was just discussing stuff,â Emilia says. âI really value intelligence. Iâm one of the very fortunate few people who really likes their family. I just like hanging out with them.â
 Clarke isnât the first woman in her family to engage in high-stakes identity juggling. Her maternal grandmother wore light makeup to disguise the fact that she was half Indian, owing to her motherâs very secret affair with a mysterious man from the colonial subcontinent. âThe fact that [my grandmother] had to hide her skin color, essentially, and try desperately to fit in with everyone else mustâve been incredibly difficult,â Clarke says. âSo, yeah: history of fighters.â
 Emiliaâs parents saved up to send her to a pair of upper-crust boarding schoolsâRye St. Antony and St. Edwardâs, both in Oxfordâbut she never felt at home with her much wealthier classmates. âI didnât really fit in, like everybody who ever went to school ever.â So she channeled her energy into performing. She was rejected the first time she applied to acting school, but eventually Drama Centre London claimed her from the waiting list when another student broke her leg and dropped out. There, she finally found the âartistically inclinedâ friends who would keep her grounded amid the circus of international fame.
 The jet-setting Clarke clings tightly to her roots even as her life and career take her ever farther from the Home Counties. For one thing, she recently got her brother a gig in the Thrones camera department. âThis job can be so alienating,â she says. âYouâre in a trailer by yourself. Youâre in a car by yourself. Youâre in a plane. Youâre in a plane. Youâre in a plane. Thatâs what success looks like if youâre an actor. Success looks like being alone.â Clarke stays sharp by devouring ânerdyâ podcasts on a range of topics from politics to science. âSheâs so informed,â says Rose Leslie. âShe has an opinion on every topic.â
 Clarkeâs father passed away in 2016 after a long battle with cancer. At the time, Emilia was in the U.S. shooting the upcoming thriller Above Suspicion and couldnât break away to say her final good-byes. âIt still sucks. Grief sucks. He doesnât know what Iâm doing now,â she says. âThatâs it before I start crying.â After a couple of romances with famous menâfirst, Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, then, reportedly, actor Jai Courtney, a brief souvenir from her Terminator Genisys shootâClarke swore off dating actors. In fact, she hasnât been romantically linked in some time. When Solo premiered at Cannes, in May, she had hoped to walk the red carpet with her brother, and her goal in general is to keep her relationships out of the news. âThe guys that Iâve met in my life that are dicks, I voluntarily walk the fuck away from them,â she says. âThatâs just bad taste. People shouldnât know about those choices.â
 Clarke usually appears in public with various non-famous âmatesâ from her drama-school days. Her âperma-plus-oneâ is Lola Frears, daughter of director Stephen Frears. âI ainât got me no celebrity friends,â Clarke says. âMy squad? They donât let me get away with anything. Thereâs not a lot of actors I relate to.â Leslie, a rare exception to Emiliaâs rule, confirms that Clarkeâs longtime friends keep her in check: âThere would be a ticking off or a bollocking if they felt she was no longer the lovely lady that they have always known.â
 The Star Wars tradition of featuring morally upright heroines, among them Carrie Fisherâs General Leia, Daisy Ridleyâs Rey, and Felicity Jonesâs Jyn Erso, was part of what drew Emilia Clarke to the role of Qiâra in Solo, but it was the chance to break the mold that really sold her. âWeâre going to hit you with a character that could very easily well be a dude, because you question her motives,â she says, sitting in a back corner of the Metâs no-frills cafeteria snacking on a pear and sipping English-breakfast tea from a paper cup. âThatâs really fucking exciting in the Star Wars universe, because that has never happened.â
 Before accepting the Solo role, Clarke had to ask Game of Thrones show-runners Weiss and Benioff for permission to complicate their plans for a final season by adding a demanding Star Wars filming schedule to the mix. They didnât hesitate. âSolo felt like a great fit that would let her show off her versatility,â Weiss and Benioff explained. âAlso, we figured sheâd probably get to shoot a ray gun. Ray guns are something we just canât offer, unfortunately.â
 Swapping dragons for ray guns, Emilia Clarke was eager to prove her mettle in a whole new galaxy. But that plan hit a snag when the Solo production fell spectacularly and publicly apart. âIâm not gonna lie,â Clarke says. âI struggled with Qiâra quite a lot. I was like: âYâall need to stop telling me that sheâs âfilm noir,â because that ainât a note.â â Frustrated by the lack of direction, she turned to Soloâs father-and-son screenwriters, Lawrence and Jon Kasdan, for support. Then, four and a half months into shooting, co-directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller exited the project, citing âcreative differences.â Production was put on hold until they were replaced by Ron Howard, a longtime friend of franchise creator George Lucasâs. With a brand-new director and an ambitious re-shoot scheduleâClarke reluctantly agrees when I call those first months âa high-budget dress rehearsalââSolo still had to hit its opening date, in May of the following year.
 Clarke says Howardâs arrival âsavedâ the movie: âAll hail to [Lucasfilm president] Kathy [Kennedy] for hiring Ron.â Slipping into a mocking impression of herself, Clarke re-enacts a self-pitying therapy session with Howard over a private meal they shared before resuming production. âHe even feigned enthusiasm!â she says. âI know for a fact he had that discussion with everybody. I think we all came to set feeling like his favorite. It makes for a really happy load of actors, with our egos.â
 Howard recalls that dinner a bit differently. The former child star of The Andy Griffith Show saw in Clarke âthe kind of pragmatism and a can-do spirit that often comes from people who have cut their teeth doing television.â
 âI know some of how tough it was for her,â Harington says. âBut sheâs pretty tough as well.â
 Clarke wasnât privy to everything that led up to the director swap, but she wasnât entirely surprised, either. âWhen it comes to that amount of money, youâre almost waiting for that to happen. Money fucks us all up, doesnât it? Thereâs so much pressure. Han Solo is a really beloved character. This is a really important movie for the franchise as a whole. Itâs a shit ton of money. A shit ton of people. A shit ton of expectations.â
 Solo wasnât the first troubled blockbuster to test Clarkeâs resilience. If anything, the production of 2015âs Terminator Genisys was more chaotic. She watched frequent Thrones director Alan Taylor get âeaten and chewed up on Terminator. He was not the director I remembered. He didnât have a good time. No one had a good time.â When the film underperformed at the box office, she was ârelievedâ to not have to return for any sequels. News of the rocky production traveled, and Clarke says the crew on the famously disastrous Fantastic Four, which was filming nearby, even had jackets made that read, AT LEAST WEâRE NOT ON TERMINATOR. âJust to give you a summary,â she says, laughing.
 Rumors spreading between film sets is one thing, but the Solo tumult was covered exhaustively in the trades and on fan sites, adding another layer of pressure to an already pressurized project. âI hope we did it good, then, because people have all this gossip,â Clarke says. âI donât want people to go, âThatâs the bit where it all went wrong. Thatâs the bit, I know it.â I just really hope that people have a good time, that itâs good, and, you know, selfishly, that Iâm not shit and that people donât write reviews going, âOh my God, thatâs, like, the worst acting Iâve ever seen in my life. Wow. How did they give her the part?â â
 For all her anxieties about how her performance will go over, Clarke and I are both energized by the Solo footage weâve seen. Clarkeâs easy chemistry with Donald Glover, who plays fan favorite Lando Calrissian, is evident from their very first on-screen meeting. And though her shifting allegiances mean she has to play a range of emotions opposite Alden Ehrenreichâs Han Solo, she endows every twist with an undercurrent of romantic possibility. Tonally closer to the Indiana Jones movies than to, say, Rogue One, Solo marks the franchiseâs return to lighthearted, fast-paced capers.
 Clarkeâwho spends most Thrones battles on the backs of her C.G.I. dragonsâwas eager to jump into the fray with some hand-to-hand combat. âShe had to deal with quite a large sword and some pretty elaborate fight choreography, and she made it look easy,â Ehrenreich says. With all the re-shoots and reconfigured plotting, she also had to fight to keep some of her favorite moments in. âThat is going to be badass as fuck,â she told the filmmakers of a showstopping Qiâra moment that made the cut. âDonât forget your audience.â
 Long before they shared a scene together, Clarke and Harington had become friends thanks to their time on the Game of Thrones promotional circuit. It was through Harington that Clarke met Rose Leslie. An adept mimic, Clarke impersonates a âsmittenâ Harington mooning over his on-screen lover and future real-life fiancĂŠe in the early days of the show: âThereâs the best human in the world. Sheâs called Rose.â
 Clarke has a teasing relationship with Harington. âIâll tell him, âKit, stop being a dickâstop being so grumpy.â Like I would with my brother.â And as the two transition in these final seasons from real-life friends to partners in TVâs biggest romance (albeit one complicated by incest), the ribbing has only increased. âIf youâve known someone for six years, and theyâre best friends with your girlfriend, and youâre best friends with them,â Harington says, âthere is something unnatural and strange about doing a love scene. Weâll end up kissing and then weâre just pissing ourselves with laughter because itâs so ridiculous.â
 âSheâs goofy,â Weiss and Benioff confirm. âWe have tried to let some of Emiliaâs humor and light seep into Daenerys whenever possible. Who says conquerors canât be funny?â A memorable Season Four conversation between Daenerys and her right-hand woman, Missandei, concerning a eunuchâs âpillar and stones,â for instance, is much more Clarke than Targaryen. Sadly, itâs unclear how much space there will be in the showâs climactic final season for bawdy, Clarke-ish humor. âIâm doing all this weird shit,â Clarke says. âYouâll know what I mean when you see it.â
 In the final episodes of a show with a body count as high as Game of Thronesâ, Clarke never really knows when she might be filming her last moments with a member of the cast. Sheâs also shooting for the first time with several of the showâs top stars, including Sophie Turner and Maisie Williams, who play the formidable Stark sisters.
 Clarke is well aware that the strong women of the series are leaving some kind of imprint on the culture, but sheâs saving up all her big-picture reflections on Daenerys for later: âThis is going to be a Band-Aid that Iâm going to rip off.â To help with that process, she started keeping a daily journal of her last season. With cell phones banned from the set due to security concerns, itâs her best hope of chronicling the final days of Daenerys. Selfies are off limits, but Clarke has asked set photographer Helen Sloan to snap the occasional behind-the-scenes photo. Both the journal and the photos, Clarke hints, may be available to the showâs fans someday.
 Clarke is unsurprisingly, and contractually, evasive when it comes to specifics of the concluding six episodes. Heavy hints in the most recent season indicate that, in addition to contending with the usual climactic end-of-the-world crises, Daenerys will also be grappling with more intimate parenthood and family issues. Here, Clarke and her on-screen alter ego may have something in common. Friends like Leslie and Harington are settling down to build their own families (âTheir wedding is going to be siiiiick,â Clarke says), and an old schoolmate recently made Clarke godmother to a highly photogenic baby boy who makes regular appearances on her Instagram account. She lights up when talking about him.
 Talking about her own parents evokes other emotions. The wounds from the loss of her father are still fresh, but her mother remains an inspiration. If all goes according to plan, itâs Jennifer Clarke who will provide the map for Clarkeâs very first post-Thrones steps. After the show ends, Clarke plans to re-create a road trip her mother took in 1972 to Yosemite and the redwoods of Northern California. With best friend and scriptwriter Lola Frears by her side, Clarke intends to spend part of the trip working on ideas for new projects. Her agents offered to take these ideas to âguysâ with writing experience, but her answer to that was pure Daenerys: âNo, Iâm going to take it to me.â
 Citing Reese Witherspoon, Greta Gerwig, and other actresses turned creators as inspiration, Clarke says she wants to work with as many female filmmakers as she can. As for the conventional industry wisdom that women canât work together without infighting? âItâs fucking bullshit. Itâs so annoying.â An active member of Timeâs Up, Clarke negotiated with Weiss and Benioff in 2014 to ensure she maintained parity with her male counterparts. She and four co-starsâHarington, Lena Headey (Cersei Lannister), Peter Dinklage (Tyrion Lannister), and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (Jaime Lannister)âreportedly each landed $300,000 per episode, a dazzling figure that skyrocketed to half a million per episode for the final two seasons. âI get fucking paid the same as my guy friends,â Clarke says. âWe made sure of that.â
 And while Clarke would be thrilled to have her own Lady Bird or Big Little Lies, thatâs not all sheâs after. She says sheâs âdesperateâ to make documentaries and shine a light on underserved causes. âThatâs the shit that gets me going personally.â Inspired by her fatherâs cancer ordeal, Clarke is especially passionate about the risks Brexit poses to the U.K.âs National Health Service, and she was recently named ambassador to the Royal College of Nursing. âThatâs something I have in common with Dae-nerys,â she says suddenly, after several hours of explaining all the reasons she and her character are nothing alike. âI really feel for people and I want to help them. Not to sound too much like Oprah Winfrey.â She pauses, and thinks again. âFuck that, Iâm gonna sound like Oprah and Iâm going to be proud of it.â
 In the midst of the twin tornadoes of Star Wars and Game of Thrones, Clarke acknowledges that most of her choices these days are âstudio choices.â And if Solo is a hit, Clarke could be working for Lucasfilm for years to come. But Harington sees something else in her future: âSheâs done, far more than me or most people in the cast, these very high-budget, big-hitting blockbusters. Hopefully Star Wars continues for her and she does more of them. But I think sheâs an incredibly talented actor, and I would love to see her do something which is a more focused character piece, because the ones sheâs done are brilliant.â Clarkeâs effervescent performance in 2016âs romantic weepy Me Before Youâa surprise hit at the box officeâhints at what sheâs capable of.
 Clarke wants to stretch herself, and explore a new-media landscape where creators no longer have to rely on large companies in order to get their projects made. âEveryone can. Get your iPhone out. Letâs do something. You know what I mean?â And with 17 million followers on Instagram, Clarke has the power to make and launch her own projects. Her recent Thrones-themed fund-raising Instagram video for the Royal College of Nursing Foundation racked up more than seven million views in just three days.
 All that takes some of the heat off Clarke as she decides how to follow up roles in two of entertainmentâs biggest franchises. She doesnât necessarily need another monster hit. She can afford to take her time, listen to herself, and do something that feels true to who she isâwhoever that may be.
 The most obvious evidence of the blur between Daenerys and Clarke is the relatively new shock of blond hair on her head. âI did this, which was frigging stupid,â she says, fingering the blunt-cut ends of her bleached hair.
 When Kit Harington trimmed his famous curls in 2015, fans were led to believe his character, presumed dead, wouldnât be returning to the show the following season. (He did.) But Clarke swears her decision to go blonde has nothing at all to do with Daenerysâs fate. âI got to a point where I said I just want to look in the mirror and see something different. So I was just like, âFuck it, itâs the last season. Iâm going to dye my hair blond.â â Clarke jokes that she immediately felt remorse and bought nine baseball caps online. âBut they donât go with your outfit, so I donât wear them.â
 Clarkeâs brown hair had always been her shield. The blond hair makes it harder to slip back into her pre-fame life. Partying with her old friends is tricky because their friends get âweirdâ about it, and she misses the mundane pleasures of, say, running errands for her mother. âWhat I get most heartbroken about is that those opportunities are almost completely gone.â Then she catches herself, and apologizes for moaning about the âchampagne problemsâ of fame. âIf I were reading this, Iâd be like, âCheer the fuck up, love.â â
 Back underneath that statue at the Met, Emilia Clarke cranes her neck up to get a closer look at the ancient pharaohâs smooth granite face. Hatshepsut wears a false beard that allowed her to pass more easily through the male-dominated world. Our guide points out a faint piece of carved string running up the pharaohâs jawline holding the disguise in place. Thinking about it later, Clarke, who knows a thing or two about disguises, passing, alter egos, and powerful women, shakes her head in astonishment. âThat is some fascinating shit right there.â
 A towering granite Daenerys statue may never find its way into the hallowed halls of the Met, but itâs not clear Emilia Clarke wants that anyway. As we duck out of the Met a bit behind schedule, only to find that itâs raining and our sleek hired car is nowhere in sight, Clarke gamely suggests we rush out into the downpour and dive into the back of a yellow cab. Our driver doesnât recognize Clarke, either, which puts her at ease. Unsure how to get to where weâre going, he passes his smartphone to her so she can type the hotelâs address into his G.P.S. âDonât worry, mate,â she announces. âYour little app will get us there!â A satisfied smile plays on her face as the taxi twists, turns, and bumps along. She looks happier than she ever has riding a dragon.
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 Press/Gallery: Emilia Clarke Solo Flight was originally published on Enchanting Emilia Clarke
#emilia clarke#game of thrones#game of thrones cast#GOT cast#daenerys targaryen#me before you#terminator
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