Administrivia: 26 June 2023

I guess all my whinging about Scotland not dropping by has paid off. At least three over the past few days. Even saw Irvine and Glesga in the mix for the first time in weeks.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

(You may or may not be able to see that. It’s the saltire. I see a black flag from my vantage point.)

(EDIT: Never mind. I can see it fine on the site, it’s in the back end that it looks wrong to me.)

I am becoming a consummate professional at wasting my weekends. I did at least get laundry done.

Am now moving to evenings at work. Curious to see how that’s going to go.

No word on the big man really. People recycling one another’s news about him per usual. I did watch this again. Enjoy.

Administrivia: 18 June 2023

I’m looking at my visitor logs again — and I should repeat this. I’ve said it before, somewhere here, but some of you probably didn’t see it: I can’t see WHO you are. Nor your home address. I can only see your city, state or province if applicable, and country — and still no Scotland, or almost none. This is so strange. I doubt all my previous Scottish visitors would have changed over to anonymous proxies. It could be that some have visited so often that some kind of cookie has kicked in and they just don’t trigger the counter anymore. I don’t really know how all that works. I know bits and pieces but not enough to form a coherent conceptual whole.

But I’m getting a lot from England. Which is even stranger. I have never not gotten visitors from England, but used to be I’d hear about as often from England as I heard from Scotland, and sometimes I’d hear significantly less often. But now as far as UK visitors go, it’s just about all England. One day recently, and I mentioned this at the time, I noted that I’d gotten way more visits than normal from London. Rory’s agent is based there and he probably pops in to them now and again for meetings and to pick up mail, so you understand why I was a little weirded out.

I wonder about that, actually. Is the big man working in England again, and that’s why I get England hits? Like, people see him in public and then decide to google him* and here they come? Is he visiting here himself? I don’t dare hope for that one. I’ve let things get sloppy here. The mind boggles, though!

There isn’t any way anyone could answer these questions in a manner I would trust. I will just have to wonder. Frowny face.

I will admit, I left it an open question as to whether I would ever set up a contact method here. I’ve thought about it. Like, one email address for fan pics, another for questions, that kind of thing. I don’t really want to, or I’d have done it already. Like, part of me is curious what would happen, but most of me doesn’t want to deal with the drama which inevitably would tag along for the ride. People just don’t know how to enjoy things anymore, they’ve always got to shit in someone else’s punch bowl. I’m not interested. I’ve had enough drama the past two years to last me the rest of my life. I just want to have fun now. I also have to work, and I’m not at my best at work if I’m stressed out. So there’s that.

Anyway, those of you who really wanted to get in touch with me figured out how to do it. I don’t always see your emails timely because for some reason they get shunted off into my junk-mail inbox, but I’ve seen a few. Even Emily pops in now and again to catch up, so that’s nice.

Okay. I did absolutely fuck-all yesterday, and I can’t do that today because I need a haircut and a bit of grocery shopping. (WOW it is weird to say that.) I will try and make myself work on this tonight, because I’ve put it off long enough. I think I’m mostly afraid I won’t get it finished, even though by its nature it can’t be finished under present circumstances. I’d elaborate, but that’s really fucking morbid, so we’ll just leave it alone. But I’m not good at putting something down and then coming back to it later, is my point. I should just get the fuck over that. Site needs work. The end.

‘Later.

[edit] Oh hey! I have found something interesting. Independent confirmation of a few things I had been wondering about. Rory’s birth time and middle name and birthplace — and it wasn’t in Glasgow, though close enough and he did grow up in the big city. But look here and here. You’re welcome. I will incorporate them as sources later. Hey, you who mentioned to me he was sighted in Paisley. What do you want to bet his mom lives there and he was visiting? Her or other family, or possibly old schoolmates he’s still in touch with. He may be an introvert, but he values his relationships from what I’ve seen.

Okay, really gotta go now.

—–
*I just checked… and I’m on the first page of search results!!! Well below his Emptage Hallett listing, which is sensible — but, I’m pleased to note, a few entries ahead of that fan-fiction romance about him. Just… don’t ask. Yes I read it. Ten minutes of my life I’ll never get back.

Administrivia: 07 June 2023

I have been sleeping in my own bed in a real apartment since Saturday and y’all, I don’t know what to do with myself.

We’re still ironing bits and pieces out, though it’s been whittled down by this point to one document that both the landlady and I have to sign. I suspect we’ll have that done by the end of the weekend if everything goes well. This is about the Salvation Army paying my landlady for deposit and first month, so it benefits her if we get it done. I’m going to try very hard not to be fussed. She’s had a rough year too. That’s her story to tell, but maybe that’s why we’ve come to this point. It’s this whole thing that really doesn’t belong here. I should write a book.

Nah. No I shouldn’t.

Never mind.

It’s basically this little wooded oasis in the middle of a city — or, more properly, its northwest edge — and if I told a local my address, just the street name, no house number, and then what my rent is, they’d be amazed. I’m like ten minutes from work, and that only because there are traffic lights between there and here. The trees muffle the worst of the noise. First night I was here I slept like a rock. It hasn’t been much different since.

Numbered among my near neighbors: more than half a dozen chickens, a rooster, two goats, some rabbits (quantity unknown), a pony, TWO DOGS (yellow Labs), and if I don’t watch it there’s gonna be a fucking partridge in a pear tree somewhere. Just you wait.

Work’s going well. Tomorrow will be a month I’ve been there. World goddamn record. I get to use my job to help people, which is really cool. The bizarre bit is that the woman who started the company got her start in Savannah, Georgia, where I’ve lived in the past and which just happens to be one of my favorite cities and my ass would be living there today, and so would the rest of me, if I could stand the heat, humidity, and fucking hurricanes. I love these little coincidences.

And we get free popcorn.

I have no idea why.

…..

Wow. Speaking of world goddamn record. Hey? Scotland? Where are you? Used to be I could count on one of you fuckers visiting daily at least. Suddenly… poof. For days and days. But for some reason I am getting a ton of visits from London. The fuck’s in London? No, I know what’s in London. Don’t fucking tell me. That’s just ridiculous. You’re just random Londoners. Right?

Bueller?

Eh. I’ll never know. Might as well roll with it.

…..

Oh hey. Got the big man’s autographed photo out of storage finally. All my stuff under one roof again. I am waiting for the landlady’s daughter, previous inhabitant of this place, to get the rest of her stuff out before I start deciding where to put my things. So I haven’t set him up yet. Yet.

(This is him signing it)

Rory McCann signing my autograph, October 2019

…..

I cannot take my work home with me, it’s just the nature of the job and I don’t work remotely, so I need to find something better to do with my off-time than natter on social media. Not that I will stop nattering on social media. Just that I need to diversify. So that’s what I’m a-gonna do. So expect more here soon.

SPECIAL: Fire Cannot Kill A Dragon

You may have been aware of the release of James Hibberd’s book Fire Cannot Kill A Dragon which was released October 2020 — or so said the sticker on my library book. I had checked it out knowing that Rory would be mentioned in it and was excited to see if there was anything I hadn’t read previously.

Nope. Oh, well.

For anyone who hasn’t seen any GOT-related interviews before or just wants a hard copy of them, this is your book. To those of us who’ve seen or read some or all of these interviews, this book wasn’t so much written as it was cobbled together from those same interviews. Yep. He took his own previously-existing stuff and put it all together in a hardcover binding. He added some newer bits as well that I can’t find via Google so I’m guessing he wrote them in the process of putting the book together.

But here’s what I could find, and sometimes some additional material that supports what’s in the book but isn’t in there. In case this is ever released in paperback or another edition, please note these pages are from the initial hardcover release.

—–

p. 26

I am not going to look up David and Dan, but here is George R. R. Martin’s reasoning for why he wanted Rory in the role (the story of how he pointed Rory out to David and Dan is in the book). At some point I will mirror that here.

p. 61

Can’t bring up Aidan Gillan’s bit about being mortified that he got Rory’s lines telling the Hound’s story to Sansa, but that little tidbit is all that was really new to me. I already knew he told the Hound’s story. It’s not really about Rory anyway.

Rory relates how they told him he wouldn’t be giving Sansa that story here.

p. 176

There’s a bit about Bryan Cogman talking about Rory having difficulty with the Hound role until David Nutter sat him down and talked with him. I can’t find that interview, but here’s David Nutter in his own words:

‘Game of Thrones’ Director on Ghost’s Departure and Brienne’s Collapse [Excerpt]

Then Rory talks about how he realized he doesn’t have to play scary all the time — see “What’s the scene you’re most proud of?”:

The Hound actor Rory McCann breaks down that Game of Thrones Cleganebowl fight

p. 177

The “I’m very close to being the Hound” is also at the previous link (Cleganebowl) under “So why have you kept to yourself so much?”

I can’t find any of the specific stuff said about Rory’s prosthetic but we’ve all heard that one before, from both his hot-weather and cold-weather filmings.

Maisie’s statement about Rory going from page 177 to 178 is also at the end of the previous link (Cleganebowl), added on at the end in a sort of postscript.

p. 179

More Bryan Cogman that I can’t find.

Here’s the thing from Gwendoline Christie. I could mirror it here, but I’ll have to think about that some more. In the book it goes all the way to page 180.

p. 298

This is the infamous story from behind the scenes about Ian McShane not liking his burger, punting it with his foot, and hitting Rory in the head with it. Actually, I have not added any of those stories to the articles page yet. I will do that at some point. Suffice to say it started out being about McShane bouncing a burger off McCann’s head and ended up, after several retellings, claiming that this actually started some kind of bad feeling or argument or fight between Ian and Rory. It was pretty stupid.

pp. 414-415

Can’t find Hafþór Björnsson’s bit about what it was like in Cleganebowl from his side, but he and the crewmember who follows him in the story both have high praise for Rory (the crewmember says, “Rory saved the day”).

Rory’s bit is from the Cleganebowl story two links ago (look back up the page) under “What did you think of the scripts this year?”

And that’s basically it. Like I said, you may still want to buy the book for whatever other reason, but there honestly wasn’t a lot that was new.

DISAPPEARING ACT Game of Thrones’ The Hound actor reveals intense crash diet for deleted topless scenes

SOURCE: The Sun
AUTHOR: Jack Pusey
DATE: 03 December 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Not sure why the headline says “deleted topless scenes.” The topless scenes never happened. Damn it.

—–

RORY McCann embarked on a dramatic weight loss regime for Game of Thrones, only for it to backfire.

The actor, who played The Hound on the HBO fantasy drama, was told that he would have to appear topless for one of his scenes and promptly vowed to get into the best shape of his life.

To shift the pounds he ditched booze and carbs, according to co-star Maisie Williams, best known for playing Arya Stark.

Maisie appeared in a special reunion panel in a clip from the new Game of Thrones Blu-ray box set.

“There was a scene where The Hound got bitten and Arya offers to burn away the rotting flesh to make him better,” she began.

“And it said in the script The Hound was topless and so Rory had been on this crazy diet,” she went on.

“He quit drinking and anyone who knows Rory knows that’s a big deal, and he quit smoking and he was just honestly just grumpy because he was eating just boiled eggs and chicken.”

Alas, Rory’s efforts were ultimately in vain, as when it came to the crunch show bosses decided it was unrealistic for the character to strip off given the miserable weather.

Rory recounted: “The funniest and best thing about it is when it came to shooting that scene they looked at the weather and said, ‘You know what, it’s a bit cold. It wouldn’t make sense you’d have your shirt off so perhaps you should just leave it on.”

Revealing how he promptly fell off the fitness bandwagon, he continued: “And I’ve never been to the gym since and that’s the truth. F*** you, that’s it.”

Descending into giggles, Maisie added: “I think he actually cracked open a beer on set, which was just hilarious.”

Rory confirmed: “I did. I never stopped drinking,”

Maisie promptly shot back: “And then that night I saw you drinking a pint of Gin and tonic.”

The hilarious exchange is just one of the many treats from the cast as part of the Blu-ray release.

‘Game of Thrones’ Star Kristian Nairn’s Mom Hospitalized, ‘Fighting for Her Life’ [Excerpt]

SOURCE: popculture.
AUTHOR: Daniel S. Levine
DATE: 11 August 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Only “reprinting” the paragraph mentioning Rory, you’ll see why. Go to the above two links for the whole thing. As far as I know, Nairn’s mom pulled through. I checked his Instagram and as of September ’20 there doesn’t seem to be anything more about the incident.

—–

“I was working as a DJ and in musical theatre. I didn’t have any real aspirations to act but my agent put me up for a role in Simon Pegg’s film Hot Fuzz. Another one-worder, oddly enough – that was ‘Yarp,'” Nairn recalled. “I didn’t get it, – by coincidence, it went to Rory McCann [who plays The Hound in GoT] – but the casting director remembered me, and four years later, called me back for Hodor.”

CLE-GOIN’ Game of Thrones favourite Rory McCann to make star appearance at Comic Con Scotland 2019

SOURCE: The Scottish Sun
AUTHOR: Colan Lamont
DATE: 27 June 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Unfortunately, Rory canceled this appearance, opting to do a private autograph session instead for which fans could mail in items.

—–

GAME of Thrones star Rory McCann is to make a star appearance at this year’s Comic Con Scotland, we can reveal.

The 50-year-old Glasgow actor – best known for portraying Sandor “The Hound” Clegane on the fantasy hit – will be meeting fans at the event in October.

Standing at a whopping 6 ft 6, Rory will be hard to miss when a galaxy of stars arrive for the convention later this year.

Rory burst onto the scene more than 20 years ago when he appeared in an advertisement for Scott’s Porridge Oats, dressed in a vest and kilt.

But it’s his hugely successful run on Game of Thrones from 2011 until 2019 that landed him other top roles in movies like XXX: Return of Xander Cage.

The two-day celebration is being held at The Royal Highland Centre and promises to be packed full of celeb guests from across the world, Q&A sessions with stars and traders selling fantasy and sci-fi goodies.

Comic Con Scotland – from Andy Kleek and the Monopoly Events team – is in its second year. The 2018 event, Scotland Comic Con – For The Love Of 80s, was a massive hit with fans bringing stars like Knight Rider’s David Hasselhoff, The Incredible Hulk star Lou Ferrigno and Ghostbuster legends Ernie Hudson, Ray Parker Junior and William Atherton.

This year, organisers promise it will be even bigger and better – with more names to be announced in the coming days.

For more information or to buy tickets log onto comicconventionscotland.co.uk

Game of Thrones star surprises pub locals after sailing into Shetland for a night out

SOURCE: The Press and Journal
AUTHOR: Alistair Munro
DATE: 19 May 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Related photos here.

—–

Fans of smash hit TV show Game of Thrones in Shetland got a surprise on Friday night when actor Rory McCann visited the capital Lerwick to take in the town’s nightlife.

The Scottish actor headed to harbour-side pub Captain Flints where a heavy metal gig was taking place, while he was later spotted in the Marlex bar about a half a mile away.

His visit came just a couple of days before the final episode of Game of Thrones is aired, with social media across the world seemingly flooded with anticipation.

Game of Thrones fan James Anderson met McCann in the Marlex pub and got a photo taken with the actor.

He said afterwards: “I’m still buzzing, it was unreal.

“Walk into the Marlex for quiet Friday night pint and meet the Hound from Game of Thrones. Superb.”

The eighth and final season of the award-winning Game of Thrones premiered in April, with the show again becoming one of the most talked-about programmes around.

The last episode was is due to air over the weekend and in the early hours of this morning. McCann has also appeared in films like Hot Fuzz and Clash of the Titans, while he also donned a kilt and vest for the memorable Scott’s Porage Oats advertising campaign of the 1990s.

He is known to enjoy sailing and spending time away from the limelight in his yacht.

The American fantasy drama Game of Thrones television series was created by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss for HBO.

The show is filmed in various locations around the world, including Scotland and Northern Ireland.

The series premiered on HBO in the United States in 2011, and will conclude with its eighth season.

Game of Thrones actor ‘a true gentleman’ on night out in Lerwick

SOURCE: The Shetland Times
AUTHOR: Unknown (credit to The Shetland Times)
DATE: 18 May 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Related photos here. There are photos on the original article here that are not present on the other article I’ve mirrored as well.

—–

Punters at a Lerwick pub got a surprise on Friday night when a Game of Thrones actor popped in for a drink.

Rory McCann, who plays Sandor “The Hound” Clegane, was spotted in the Douglas Arms (Marlex). And far from living up to his character’s fearsome reputation in the HBO series the actor was happy to pose for photographs.

One of those who chatted to McCann was Stuart Nicolson from Lerwick. He said it was an otherwise quiet night in the pub on Commercial Road and described the Scottish actor as “a true gentleman”.

Mr Nicolson posted on Facebook, “Can’t believe I’ve met the hound at the marlex #GOT #healive”. The actor was also spotted in Captain Flint’s bar.

The Game of Thrones finale will be shown in the UK in the early hours of Monday – one of the most highly-anticipated television events of this year.

Like Us, Rory McCann Has Been Thinking About “Clegane Bowl” for Years

SOURCE: HBO: Making Game Of Thrones
AUTHOR: Ashley Morton/HBO
DATE: 15 May 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

—–

The actor behind fan-favorite The Hound discusses the epic showdown between the Clegane brothers in “The Bells”, reuniting with Maisie Williams, and why he brought a trumpet to the final read-through.

HBO: The cast sat down for a big final read-through of the last season — what was that like?

Rory McCann: I’m probably the same as most actors [when we get scripts]. First thing we do is find our bits — to hell with everyone else, when am I going to die? What the hell is going to go on? — but I was aware of quite a few actors who said they didn’t do that. I didn’t actually believe them, but when we got together for the read-through I could see by the tears and shock some of them really didn’t know what was going on. Particularly Kit Harington [who plays Jon Snow]. That was funny. He had no idea, he was just in shock. But I’d read my bits, so it was very exciting. I remember bringing a big trumpet and keeping it underneath the table; I told [writer] Bryan Cogman, who usually does all the narration in between the dialogue with great passion, to take a pause when Gregor and Sandor meet for the final showdown. I brought the trumpet out and blew it with the whole cast in the room. I don’t think they knew what was going on but it was me pretending that Clegane Bowl is on.

HBO: Had you been looking forward to that fight as much as the fans?

Rory McCann: Absolutely. I’ve been thinking about it for years, honestly. We had this sparring session in Season 1 all those years ago, and this was the end of the journey, a completion. I’m so grateful they decided to write that in. It was a lot of fun.

HBO: Were you satisfied with that being your character’s ending?

Rory McCann: I’d written myself off once the fight started — there’s a chance by the end of it that Sandor is probably blinded and he’s pretty broken up. But he had enough energy to complete his mission and stuff his brother’s face in the fire, even if it meant ending his own life. I think the Hound would have been quite happy with that. I think he knew when he rode out with Arya and said, “I don’t plan on coming back.”

HBO: The fight looks pretty brutal. What was performing it like?

Rory McCann: Well training-wise, I started to work out, and then I thought, “What is the point of putting on any muscle at all when you are fighting the officially strongest man in the world?” It’s going to make no difference at all. So I could relax there. The fight was brutal. The set had been built for that one purpose alone, for Clegane Bowl, and took months of building: It was absolutely incredible. But when we heard it was all going to be on stairs — it’s the last thing big men want to do, go up and down on a set of stairs — that was quite worrying. There was worry of twisting our ankles or hurting ourselves. But it was an amazing experience. My sister, who was also with me for that fight all those years ago, was there with me pouring a bottle of water down my back in between takes. It was wonderful.

We lost our swords after a few moves, and then it just got down and dirty. I had the stuntmen saying to the strongest man in the world “When you pick up Rory, just throw him at half strength onto the wall over there” and I’m going, “Whoa, whoa, whoa, that’s still a lot of brute force, can we go down to 10 percent maybe?” So I was a bit battered and bruised. But Hafþór [Júlíus Björnsson, who plays the Mountain] was suffering big time as well. He had a prosthetic in which he could barely drink, never mind eat, and was extremely hot as well. But he did fantastically. He’s actually a gentle soul. I had to encourage him to strangle me more, to press into my eyes more; he’s absolutely a big gentle man and aware of his strength, thank God. He’s a great guy, and it was a legendary fight.

HBO: Before your final showdown you have a wonderful little moment with Arya, played by Maisie Williams. What was it like being reunited with her again this season?

Rory McCann: We’ve been on a hell of a road trip together. Arya’s completely different from the little girl the Hound first met. There’s a real respect for her. In that scene, there’s a dragon above us, things are tumbling down, but he’s trying to get one last message through to her: she doesn’t need to live her life full of hate and anger, there can be another way. It’s too late for the Hound, he’s decided.

Working with Maisie has been magical. I still can’t quite believe that amongst all the politics of this big story we were almost allowed our little road trip on the side. It’s definitely one of the happiest jobs I’ve ever had. I love working outside. So it brought back great memories working with her. She’s a fantastic actress and she kept me on my tip-toes that’s for sure.

HBO: What will you miss the most about working on this series?

Rory McCann: Am I going to ever have a greater written story or character that’s so perfect for me? The amount of different directors was a great opportunity too. Working with the best of the best. They all work differently, so I learned a lot from that. I still haven’t watched the whole show, but I may try to set up a projector on my boat and play Game of Thrones on my main sail as I go. One of my sails has a dog on it as well. It’s just a little nod.

I felt like [creators] David [Benioff] and Dan [Weiss] knew me so well that when I opened up the scripts in the last few years it was almost the way I talk, and my mannerisms. They used parts of me big time. It’s never going to be the same again. They understood us. We were having dinner at David and Dan’s house in Belfast and I cracked open a beautiful bottle of whiskey. And it was late, and I was doing the main part of my fight with the Mountain the next day and Dan stood up and said, “You have a big day tomorrow,” and took my glass away. And I sounded like a little boy saying, “But I don’t want to go home!” I had to leave the party early. It was like a family thing. Course, the next day when I was getting tossed down the stairs I said to him, “Do you not think it would have been better if I had been still drunk?”

I’ll miss all of that, but I’m glad it’s over as well. I won’t miss the hours of makeup and hulking around the armor, I can see myself when we started, I’ve got no gray in my beard, and now I do and I’m hobbling around like an old man. But happy memories. I’ll heal soon. It’s never going to be as good as Game of Thrones, it can’t be, but boy were we lucky.