‘Game of Thrones’ Exclusive: Actor Rory McCann reflects on the Hound’s renewed purpose

SOURCE: Buro. Singapore
AUTHOR: Aravin Sandran
DATE: 14 April 2019
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: I am only reproducing the interview here. For anything else included with the interview, go to the original website article or the Internet Archive link.

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How does the final season of Game of Thrones begin for your character?
He’s part of the crew. He’s not the loner any more. He’s found some direction and meaning in his life. He still hates his brother but overriding it all, he’s part of a mission.

What was the final all-cast table read like?
We made a big effort. When it’s being read out and narrated, there’s a lot of energy and people were going for it. There were a few actors that really — and I thought they were kidding on — that they hadn’t read the script. They were waiting until that day. Kit (Harington) was one of them. He wasn’t just pretending. He was sight-reading it and then you could probably see his face going, “Noooooo.” It’s emotional.

I remember we were stood up for the 10 minutes just clapping and we’re looking at David (Benioff) and Dan (DB Weiss) was going, “Wow.” My hair was on end just thinking about it.

So the millions of people out there looking forward to the final series…
Will not be disappointed. No, because they’ve got it in their own heads, those theories and stuff. It might not suit their version.

Looking back over the series, when was the moment you realised that everything had gone to another level?
A couple of seasons in really. I’ve been in denial for a long time — I haven’t really watched much of it, so I’m going ‘la, la, la…’ I had a year off and even then you’re still in the middle of nowhere and you suddenly pass a stranger in a really remote place and suddenly you hear, “Are you alive or are you dead?”

There’s plenty that you’ll miss of course from making Game of Thrones. Is there one thing that you won’t miss?
Well, for me, it will be the costumes. I was always the first in just with this prosthetic on my face. The one for the burn. Every day. I will not miss that. Then when I was working around it, I usually had to have half a beard. This side all had to be shaved off. And then you go back home and people go, ‘Listen, you need to sort that out.’ I go, ‘I’m working, I’ve told you this time and time again. When I have no beard on this side of my face, it means that I’m working.’ ‘Well, it looks ridiculous big man.’

Which Game of Thrones characters are still alive? [Excerpt]

SOURCE: The Times
AUTHOR: Benji Wilson
DATE: 09 July 2017
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Cannot archive due to paywall.
NOTE: Didn’t want to post a bunch of other character sections just to get to Rory. If this looks familiar it’s because he’s been quoted saying these words by some other publication, but I don’t know who had the words first, so here you go.

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Rory McCann
Sandor Clegane, ‘the Hound’
Personally, I don’t watch the show – I live on a boat — and this season that has caused some problems. Before this year, my character’s been on a road trip with Arya Stark all the time, so I didn’t need to know who anyone else was. This season Sandor has joined up with the Brotherhood Without Banners, so I kept coming to film scenes going, “So who’s the big f****** ginger guy then?” “Oh, he’s Tormund.” “Well, is he a good guy or what? And who are you?” And some of the other actors are going, “Are you joking? I’ve been on this show for three years, man.”

The good thing was, it meant this year I finally got to know lots of the other cast. Honestly, I feel like that’s the first time I properly socialised or relaxed — normally I hide. I don’t drink, don’t smoke. It turns out half of us are reasonably good musicians, so we were all having great jams. I was on the piano most nights. We’ve got Richard Dormer, great ukulele player. Paul Kaye’s a wonderful guitarist and plays all sorts as well. Kit [Harington] was feeling left out, so he ended up buying a set of bongos, bless him. We called ourselves the Brotherhood Without Banjos.

A GIANT SUCCESS: Texas star Sharleen Spiteri reveals Game of Thrones actor Rory McCann was a natural on drums in their latest single

SOURCE: The Scottish Sun
AUTHOR: Colan Lamont
DATE: 08 June 2017
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

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TEXAS star Sharleen Spiteri has revealed Game of Thrones actor Rory McCann is every bit as good with a pair of drumsticks as he is with a sword.

The 6ft 6in giant played drums on new single Tell That Girl and Sharleen says The Hound is a natural.

She says: “The Hound gets involved like anyone gets involved in a Texas video, it’s normally because they’re mates.

“Rory came into to see us in rehearsals, and I said why not be in our video.

“He’s a good musician and we said he should play drums or whatever and just be in there, so that people would see it and just be like, is that Rory McCann?

“Trust me, if you can make a video fun it’s good.”

And Rory took along some memorabilia from the hit show.

Sharleen added: “He brought his big helmet he wears on Game of Thrones – it weighed so much, it’s so heavy.

“He’s gigantic, I think he might be 7ft 5in, not 6ft 5in.

“My favourite thing is that he sings backing vocals in the video too.

“That cracks me up because we never asked him to do that, he was just going for it. The best laugh was at one point we had him do one take on his own and he was amazing.”

Sharleen was at The Barrowlands to promote the Texas & the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra gig which takes place tomorrow.

This unmissable collaboration will be broadcast live on BBC Radio Two and BBC Radio Scotland tonight with highlights on BBC Two Scotland next Friday.

Vin Diesel gets in touch with his Scottish heritage after he is gifted specially designed kilt from Scots co-star

SOURCE: Daily Record
AUTHOR: Samantha Croal
DATE: 24 March 2016
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Is it possible to love someone vicariously? Asking for a friend. This was just UNBELIEVABLY SWEET of Rory.

(Okay. I can actually believe it.)

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THE Hollywood actor received a bonnie wee package fit for any Scots clansman from a famous Scottish friend.

HOLLYWOOD actor Vin Diesel has connected with his Scottish heritage after he was gifted a specially designed tartan kilt for his Scots clan.

The actor, real name Mark Sinclair, was sent the kilt as a gift from his Scottish co-star Rory McCann after the actor uncovered Diesel’s real name.

The Scottish actor sent the specially designed kilt to Diesel, with a note attached writing: ‘No Sinclair should be without his clan tartan. Hope you like the sporran.’

The kilt was reportedly made by Brian Halley who owns the Slanj kilt shop in Glasgow.

The pair are set to star in xXx: The Return of Xander Cage which has been slated for a 2017 release.

The Game of Thrones actor and Hollywood legend have built up a friendship after starring on set together.

Scots Game of Thrones star Rory McCann: Learning new skills for Banished on BBC2 was a thrill

SOURCE: The Daily Record
AUTHOR: Steve Hendry
DATE: 01 March 2015
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Rory is quoted at both the beginning and the end here.

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RORY is set to appear in Banished on BBC2 and had to learn top be a blacksmith as part of the role in the new period drama.

RORY McCANN wasn’t afraid
 to get his hands dirty when he landed the role of a convict blacksmith in the Aussie
 Outback.

The Game of Thrones star features
 in Banished, a major new drama from Jimmy McGovern, which tells the story of the founding of the first penal colony in Australia in 1788.

Rory, 45, who shot to fame in an iconic ad for Scott’s Porage Oats, learned how to work a forge for real in Scotland
 before heading Down Under.

He said: “I have friends who are
 blacksmiths in the north of Scotland, so I took a few masterclasses with 
them. I loved learning a new skill. I will never look at a piece of wrought iron the same way now.

“I can now make semi-decent knife blades and candlesticks myself.

“On set, we had a working forge. The design team even found some original bellows and an anvil from the 1700s.”

Besides Rory, Banished – which begins on BBC2 on Thursday at 9pm – has a strong Scottish presence.

The Paradise’s Joanna Vanderham, Trainspotting’s Ewen Bremner and Mr Selfridge star Cal MacAninch appear alongside Myanna Buring, Orla Brady and Julian Rhind Tutt. Rising star Joanna, 22, from Scone, Perthshire, plays Kitty McVitie who is convicted for stealing from her employer, Lord Campbell of Weymouth.

She said: “Kitty is wrenched from the world she knows and carted off to
Australia. It makes her pretty fragile.

“On the ship over, Kitty falls for
 a soldier, Private MacDonald, who she believes will look after her.

“But as events unfold her love is 
challenged. The story is universal because the characters are so real. You meet them and it’s impossible not to want to find out what happens to them.”

Ewen Bremner plays Reverend Stephen Johnson, based on the
minister who accompanied the First Fleet to Australia in the 1780s.

He said: “He has to establish a
 church in this new world. In those
days, the church was much more 
powerful and a central force in people’s lives.

“As the only
 spiritual authority in this new world, Rev Johnson has quite a position of influence over people.

“The majority of the community appreciate the guidance – he’s a kind of connection with God and they 
appreciate this solace in such times of traumatic adversity.”

Filmed at Manly Dam in Sydney, Banished is also a tale of survival.

The First Fleet of 1000 people were sent out to Australia with only six scythes to start their own community and they faced a host of new 
challenges, with shark-infested waters on one side and a strange, dry land on the other.

It wasn’t hard for the actors to 
imagine what it must have been like for the soldiers and convicts.

Rory, who used to work as a
 lumberjack and as a painter on the Forth Road Bridge, says he found the contrast with Australia startling.

He said: “I live out in the country in Scotland and know that if I close my eyes, I can recognise every sound.

“On that set in Australia, it felt so alien – there were all these mad screeching noises.

“It didn’t take much imagination to feel like you were in another world.”

Rory McCann on Game of Thrones’ ‘brutal’ conditions and that Cleganebowl theory

SOURCE: The Sydney Morning Herald
AUTHOR: Benji Wilson
DATE: 3 August 2014
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

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Rory McCann hobbles in, sits down, puts one of his tree-trunk legs up on a chair and plonks an ice pack on his knee.

“Just wear and tear,” he says to my raised eyebrow. “Plus I’ve been doing up my boat, so I’ve been working on my knees – with an already damaged knee.”

When we meet he’s no more than a month from the end of filming season seven of Game of Thrones. McCann plays Sandor “The Hound” Clegane, a sellsword and bodyguard with a messed-up face and a bone-dry wit. Just occasionally The Hound reveals a softer side; enough to have made him a fan favourite. It’s a role that requires much fighting, wrestling, running and carrying so I don’t believe it’s just wear and tear that has done for his knee.

McCann gives me a look, similar to the one he gives characters in Game of Thrones shortly before he kills them, and then confesses.

“OK, it was from the show. I can’t tell you exactly how but I had this guy on my shoulder for days and days – it didn’t work with a dummy so I had to carry a real guy and we had to run and run … No wonder I’m f—ed.”

McCann’s character was abandoned at the end of season four after a brutal fight; most fans thought he was dead until he reappeared 18 months later. This season, he has a major role.

McCann has been on the show from the first season in 2011, long enough to know that giving away upcoming storylines is more than his job’s worth, but he does say this: “At the end of last season he found himself with the Brotherhood without Banners and he had to make a choice. It was basically, ‘Do you wanna do the right thing? Do you wanna find peace within yourself? Join us and fight the fight against evil.’ And that was what he chose. So this time round he’s on a road trip with the brotherhood when we join him. And there’s a lot going on.”

The Hound, who began as Prince Joffrey’s bodyguard, is no stranger to road trips. For most of seasons three and four he was on the road with Arya Stark (Maisie Williams), who began as his hostage and wound up as a sort of verbal sparring partner and frenemy (though he was always on her “death list”). It’s meant that until this year, most of McCann’s work on Thrones has been opposite just one other actor – and that has suited him fine.

“Normally when we’re filming, I hide,” he says. “I don’t drink, I don’t smoke and I’m used to living on my own on a boat on the west coast of Scotland. With the other cast, it’s been like passing ships in the night.”

McCann, 48, is well known for living a solitary, transient lifestyle – when Thrones first filmed in Iceland, he liked the remoteness so much he moved there for a year. Unsurprisingly, he doesn’t have a TV. But this season, on tour with the brotherhood, McCann has been forced to come out of his shell.

“The first problem has been that I don’t watch the show. I’m a bit different that way, I don’t watch telly at all. So when I met the other actors [for season seven] I didn’t know who they were. I’d be asking people, ‘So who’s the big guy over there then?’ ‘Oh, he’s Lord whatever of House whatever.’ ‘Well, is he a good guy or a bad guy? And who are you?’ And some of them are going, ‘Are you f—ing joking? We’ve been here on the show for three years, man!’ ”

Once he accepted that he was to be part of an ensemble, McCann surprised himself.

“I’ve managed to socialise for the first time. I didn’t really get to know people until this year. The best thing was it turned out that half of us are reasonably good musicians so we got to have these great jams most nights.”

McCann, Richard Dormer (who plays Beric Dondarrion) and Paul Kaye (Thoros of Myr) styled themselves as the Brotherhood without Banjos”.

“Richard Dormer, great ukulele player. Paul Kaye’s a wonderful guitarist and he plays all sorts as well. Normally everyone else on the show is always playing Risk apart from me. But the jams we had I’ll never forget,” says McCann, who sings and plays piano, banjo and mandolin.

It was good the brotherhood bonded; filming this season of Thrones was, in McCann’s inimitable phrase, “pretty f—ing hardcore”.

“We filmed by this quarry in Belfast about 1000 feet up. We had hard weather there and then in between scenes we’d be going back to our trailers and everyone was covered in shit. Some days were actually brutal.”

It didn’t help that McCann, a big bear of a man, spends every day on set with most of his face covered in a prosthetic scar.

“With the latex you sweat whether you like it or not. You’re all wrapped up in some heated trailer or make-up truck and then you go out on set and it’s freezing,” he says. “Then the sweat underneath your latex freezes.”

It may have been cold, but one thing they didn’t have while shooting in Northern Ireland was snow. Given that “Winter is Here” in Westeros this season, snow had to be supplied.

“The mad thing was in Belfast there weren’t real blizzards going on, so they had these massive fans, like the ones on those airboats in swamps,” McCann says. “We’d have at least two of them going with guys throwing paper snow in front of it and you couldn’t hear what the next actor was saying. Everyone was just lip reading and eating paper.”

McCann may not have a TV, but he is aware of the buzz around his character on the internet.

“That Cleganebowl shite,” he calls it. On the show, The Hound’s loathed older brother is the even bigger, even nastier “Mountain”, played by Icelandic strongman Julius Hapfor Bjornsson. Cleganebowl refers to a long-running fan fantasy that some day the two men will meet in a momentous single combat.

McCann, naturally, is ruling nothing in or out.

“I have met him, yes. He’s not that much taller than me. But if it kicks off I’m still gonna be the Jack Russell and he’ll be the Rottweiler. Mind you, look at me now,” he says, pointing to his crocked knee.

“Guess I’d better start training.”

Rory McCann Still Knows All the Moves From the Hound’s Big Battle

SOURCE: HBO: Making Game of Thrones
AUTHOR: Katie M. Lucas (HBO)
DATE: 19 June 2014
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

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Sandor “The Hound” Clegane traveled a long road this season, journeying across the kingdoms with Arya Stark, while at the same time evolving from cold-blooded killer to Arya’s ally. HBO.com talked to Rory McCann about the Hound’s brawl with Brienne, getting bitten, and teaching Arya only too well.

HBO: How much training did you have for the fight with Brienne?

Rory McCann: We rehearsed for about three weeks in Ireland in quite a small tent with sprung floors. They worked out literally every move of that fight. Alex Graves, the director, kept away until we had most of the forms down, and then he came in and tweaked a few things. He wanted the audience to not know who would win until the end.

Then we had to transpose the scene into a different environment. We got out to Iceland, and of course, the terrain was completely different. We were up high in the mountains with volcanic rock, and it was quite hot. We worked on the scene for about three days and were black and blue by the end of it.

HBO: Were the bruises a result of the fight’s physicality?

Rory McCann: It was more from falling on the rock around us. The armor we wear isn’t padded underneath. Both of us were very sore and bruised for weeks. It just couldn’t be helped.

HBO: What were you thinking when Brienne bites off the Hound’s ear?

Rory McCann: Why does everybody want to bite the Hound? I’m absolutely sick of it. The bite was payback though — I did kick Brienne between the legs. I feel like there were a lot of fans who were maybe “Team Hound” that switched to “Team Brienne” when I did that. That was literally below the belt.

HBO: That looked painfully real.

Rory McCann: The stunt team was desperate to get rid of the swords as soon as possible just to get really down and dirty. They came up to me and asked, “Are you alright, mate, about kicking her in the ‘foo foo’?” I know what a “foo foo” is now.

On the day of filming, they put a big belt between [Gwendoline Christie’s] knees so while she was crawling, I could take a right good run at her and my foot would just miss her.

HBO: It sounds like the choreography was incredibly detailed.

Rory McCann: I think it’s so instilled in our brains that if you gave us 20 minutes, we could actually do that fight again. We play pool together sometimes and I can imagine having the full-on fight with pool sticks for a laugh.

HBO: The fight stems from the Hound’s need to protect Arya. What has the Hound come to feel for her?

Rory McCann: I think there was a transition. Before, the Hound saw Arya as kind of a meal ticket, a chance for survival and money. But by the end of it, he felt he was keeping her safe. There was a sort of father-daughter bond starting. Of course at the end, maybe the Hound taught her too well since she took his money and didn’t put him out of his misery.

HBO: How did the Hound feel about Arya walking away?

Rory McCann: He couldn’t believe it. She didn’t do the merciful thing. It’s very disappointing.

HBO: Both of the Clegane brothers do serious battle this season.

Rory McCann: Yeah. I saw the clip of where Gregor pops Oberyn’s head like a bloody watermelon. That was brutal. That’s a Clegane for you.

HBO: What scene was most special to you?

Rory McCann: When I found out I was going to Iceland, I couldn’t believe it. Dan [Weiss] and David [Benioff] told me the year before, and I was just smiling. I used to live there and I hadn’t been back for years, so I just looked forward to all my scenes in Iceland.

My sense of accomplishment on that final fight was pretty cool. That was stuff I’ve just been dreaming of for years, and in my beloved Iceland as well. That was the special one.

THINK FAST
HBO:
If you were on trial, who would you want as your champion?

Rory McCann: Bronn. He’s fast and there’s a mutual respect.

HBO: What would you be on trial for?

Rory McCann: Stealing all the chickens.

HBO: You’re invited to a GOT wedding. Would you go?

Rory McCann: No. Avoid at all costs.

HBO: What would you name your sword?

Rory McCann: I don’t name my sword. Only c*nts name their sword.

‘Game Of Thrones’: Maisie Williams’ Bond With Rory McCann

SOURCE: Access Online
AUTHOR: Jolie Lash
DATE: 19 April 2014
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

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As they fight and gripe their way through Westeros, Arya and The Hound have prompted many fans to wish for a “Game of Thrones” spinoff featuring Arya Stark and The Hound.

The pairing of Maisie Williams’ Arya and Rory McCann’s The Hound, is not only intriguing, but utterly delightful to watch. And off screen, the two actors have formed a friendship.

“She’s amazing,” Rory previously told Access Hollywood of his teenage co-star. “We have great fun. …I really respect her.”

And Maisie also sang Rory’s praises when we interviewed her. But first, she shared a little tease at what’s ahead now that Arya has made her first kill (knocking Polliver off her list in the show’s Season 4 premiere).

AccessHollywood.com: What can you hint at about what’s next with Arya and The Hound? Are they going to constantly be getting into scrapes, following the Polliver/chickens incident?
Maisie Williams: The hint would be there are more people that are gonna get crossed off the list. …That’s kind of the biggest hint I can give and more of that — this new Arya. We’ve now introduced this new Arya. It’s not like she’s lost at all, she’s just completely grown and is now much better — doing much better off.

Access: She was nice around Gendry.
Maisie: Yeah.

Access: And even Jaqen.
Maisie: They all softened her. That’s the thing. I think she realizes that actually, they were great and… she learned a lot, but they weren’t effective, if you understand what I mean. …Saying the names is great, but I haven’t actually killed anyone yet. And with The Hound, brutality kills, do you know what I mean?

Access: Tell me what it’s like working with Rory McCann who plays Sandor Clegane/The Hound. He seems really interesting. He once told me in an interview that he lived in a place you had to row a boat to get to.
Maisie: He lived in this bunker for a while and he’s got a boat and then he also sometimes just camps out in the woods. He’s the coolest guy ever. We chat, and sometimes… when he goes out camping and stuff, he hears noises and he gets scared. When he told me that story, I just cried laughing.

Access: About this giant man getting scared?
Maisie: Yeah, exactly and I was making these weird noises, I was going like, ‘Hsssggggrrrrrrr!’ like that.

Access: Does he talk to you normally, even though you’re younger than he is?
Maisie: Yeah, and he doesn’t have kids either, so this relationship between Maisie and Rory could have turned out completely different, but we’re just like hanging out all the time, just like sat on the floor between takes.

Access: Has he taught you anything? I know he used to play songs on set.
Maisie: He gave me his strumstick at the end of last season.

Access: A strumstick?
Maisie: It’s a guitar thing with three strings that’s really skinny and long and it’s all tuned to a G chord and you can’t play a wrong note on it, so you can just like strum around. …He showed me it and I really, really liked it and then he gave it to me at the end of last year. So then, when I was back at home, I taught myself a few songs, and I came back and I played them to him. And I like did this little song — Jason Mraz, ‘I Won’t Give Up’ — and just sang that for him in one of the rehearsals for the stunts and it’s so funny, all these big, beefy stunt guys, all sat around, and like Rory. And just me like [sings], ‘I won’t give up, on… us.’ So embarrassing.

Access: Awww… They should just deal with it and learn to like pop music.
Maisie: Exactly and sometimes on set, like they’re [doing] really guy things and then I’ll come out with something like ‘Oh! That take, I got a splinter in my hands,’ and they’re like, ‘Ahhh. Oh my God, Maisie. You’re such a girl.’ (laughs). Just every now and then I’ll come out with something, and it’s just like, ‘Why did I say that.’

Access: You know what though? Own it.
Maisie: Own it. I have them all wrapped around my little finger (laughs). I’m totally joking.

‘Game of Thrones’ Q&A: Rory McCann on ‘The Hound’ and Season Four

SOURCE: Rolling Stone
AUTHOR: Sean T. Collins
DATE: 07 April 2014
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here

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The Scottish actor drops hints about the new season, how to have a good time in Iceland and the Hound/Wolf “dream team”

“Did you hear the story that ‘McCann’ means ‘wolfhound’?” asks Rory McCann, the actor who plays Game of Thrones‘s resident wandering warrior/royal-orphan caretaker Sandor “The Hound” Clegane, with great excitement. It’s a fitting question: In talking to McCann, the line between the 6’6″ Scottish actor (his nickname is “Big”) and his larger-than-life role can get pretty blurry. He’s way less mean, but no less a character.

On last night’s Season Four premiere, both the performer and his onscreen counterpart had a breakout sequence. The Hound’s surprise team-up against Lannister goons with his hostage, young wolf Arya Stark (played by the brilliant Maisie Williams), was exemplary of the show at its funniest, bloodiest and most thrilling. And according to the exceedingly friendly McCann, it marks the start of a season-long journey that makes the Hound a once-in-a-lifetime role. Given the lifetime McCann has already had, that’s saying something.

What’s your relationship with Maisie Williams like?
She’s just such a good actress! Really clever, really bright, she knows everything… she’s a real help to me, because I’m a bit goofy and a bit daft. I forget where I am in the story and she knows my lines, my story, where we are, what’s going on, the reason we’re there. I get in trouble for pulling faces, and she keeps me in check. The great thing is, I don’t think she realizes how good she is yet — so don’t tell her.

It certainly looks like fun. At the premiere, the crowd went nuts for it.
That reaction! You’re wondering if the comedy worked, or the tension, but then you could feel the crowd respond. Bear in mind, this is made for people watching it in their living rooms, but there was a packed-out cinema; they were howling and shouting and screaming. Some of the lines they’ve given the Hound this year are incredible. Even in this first episode, just those three words when she says “Lots of people name their swords” and he responds: “Lots of cunts.” [Laughs]

Arya is an asset now, as well. I was getting attacked from behind in that fight, and suddenly she brought the man down. Just watching it makes you bloodthirsty. A little child killing a guy? Yeah! [Laughs] A kind of dream team is formed in that first episode, I feel. She’s got her sword, she’s got a horse, she’s got some food — let’s just go. The script just said “Two killers ride off into the sunset.” Yeah!

That scene’s fascinating, because it starts as comedy and then degenerates into this horrific violence. It’s really funny, but…
…Then there’s brutality ten seconds later. The thing is, the fights are broken off. We worked on just that fight for two days, and then the drama. It’s all chopped up in editing. But for the drama stuff, we don’t workshop it. You just walk in, do a couple of rehearsals for camera, hopefully we’ve got it right, and then we start filming it. But, you know, we have the director coming in and going “More snot, please. Here’s another beer.” [Laughs]

When I had to drink in that tavern scene, that’s David and Dan going “Give him another beer! Fill it right up to the top! Can you down another?” I was really fit at the time, wasn’t drinking, working out, there was definitely no sugar in my body — and suddenly I had six or seven liters of flat ginger beer that day. I had to go off into the woods to make myself sick. They had this new helper, I didn’t know who he was, and they told him “We’ve lost the Hound! We’ve lost the Hound!” I’m on my hands and knees with my fingers down my throat trying to get this bloody soda out of me. He came up like, “Are you — ” [growls] “FUCK OFF!” [Laughs] He ran away into the woods. [high-pitched, scared helper voice] “He told me to fuck off!”

But it doesn’t really seem like it’s hard for you to shake off the Hound when you’re playing him.
No, no. But the reality is, I’m the first guy on set because of this fucking make-up. So I’m getting done for three hours, then I’m getting my breakfast, and I’ve been up for six hours before there’s even a suggestion of getting on set. I end up this big fucking grumpy bastard most of the time. “Kill that guy? Sure.” [Laughs] It’s very easy to be the Hound.

The Hound is complex: He’s funny, scary, tragic… even protective at times.
There’s a lot to him. He’s damaged goods. There’s that burned face— he’s feeling that every day. He’d really love to sort that brother out and rip his bloody head off. He was bullied as a child, and that’s why he’s looking out for Sansa, and why there’s a slight fatherly thing going on with Arya as well. But he hasn’t revealed anything yet, has he? That’s what’s gonna happen this season. He’s gonna open up these naked emotions. He’s gonna reveal what makes him tick.

My audition was a scene of the Hound describing to Sansa how he got his burned face. It happens in the book, and they were gonna film it in the first episode: “Look at me — this is the reason I am the way I am.” Then they decided not to do it. David pushed Dan into my trailer, and I was like, “Why are you pushing the wee guy in? You got something to say?” “We decided we want to bring you in gentler. We don’t want you to talk about yourself at the moment. But don’t worry!” I go “You’re bruising my ego. You’re not… firing me?” “No, no, we’re not firing you! We’re just gonna bring you in slower.” It’s taken four fucking years, but here we go. [Laughs] That’s what’s happening. I’m gonna open up this time. The Hound’s gonna speak freely.

It’s definitely the heaviest acting I’ve ever done. I’ve got it sussed out: When I get a job, I make phone calls to every single person I know and tell them not to bloody call me. [Laughs] “Aw, c’mon, Big, there’s no need for that!” They try and phone, but I can hear the ice in their whiskey tumblers clinking, I can hear them smoking, and I think “You’re gonna take me over to the dark side. I’m Mister Healthy at the moment.” I get really, really, really focused. It’s a bit boring. But I think it works. Before, I’d get very nervous, and now I’m not. People on set told me “Jesus, this is the first time they’ve ever had to put fake sweat on you!”

You guys are shooting in Iceland this year — where you used to live, right?
I hadn’t shot in Iceland with Game of Thrones before — I’d always shot in Malta or Croatia, and [I] was far too hot in that armor. When I was told I was going to Iceland, I couldn’t believe it. Six or seven years ago I went there to do a Viking film, and at the end of it they were like, “You’re going now?” “No, I’m staying.” “No, no, the job’s over.” [firmly] “No. I’ve got my tent. And I’m staying. Thank you very much.” I phoned my agent and went “Don’t phone me unless I’ve definitely got a job.” He didn’t phone me for a year. [Laughs] “Hello? Anything?” I ended up being a carpenter, building houses. Then their whole market crashed, and I borrowed some money off an actor pal that I met up there and hitched out of the place.

I got there last year to do [this season of] Game of Thrones. I’d hitched out of the place on borrowed money, and suddenly there’s this beautiful blonde driver beside this white Range Rover, all smoked out, going [in Scandinavian accent] “Hello, my name is Herta. Should we go skinny dipping before we go to the hotel?” [Laughs] “That would be lovely, Herta.”

Then I was meeting people over there that still didn’t know me as an actor, they just knew me as the guy who used to go to the library. Some still thought I was a local there. I met old friends again, had my bicycle again, did all my old things again. I only partied on the last night, because I was behaving myself. I thought I was gonna have to get my top off for a scene, so I was working out — I mean, I didn’t even drink water for the last 24 hours. On the day, the director comes up to me, and I’ve got dumbells on set, like [makes weightlifting motions] “YEAH! UHHH! FUCKIN’ READY!!!” He touches me on the shoulder and goes “Rory, I was thinking about it last night — I think we’ll just keep the top on,” and leaves me. “Fucking… I haven’t been out for fucking four months! I haven’t had a beer in fucking three months!”

So that night, Maisie was there, it was our last night in Iceland, it was my one night out… and we got stopped by the police. [Laughs] We were all in a van, we had a designated driver, and we were all drunk — but for Maisie, of course — and singing. The police stopped us, he had his hand on the holster, and the driver went “It’s the cast of Game of Thrones.” “Oh yeah? Open up.” I had the nearest seat. I’ve obviously had a few drinks, and I’m very excited. He looks at me, and I go [booming voice] “Hello! I’m the Hound!” And he looks and says “…Hello, Hound! You enjoy Iceland?” I said a few things in Icelandic, and he’s like “Fuck yeah! Well, you have a good time!” And we went on singing. [Laughs] Have you been to Iceland?

No. I’ve been to Scotland, though.
You must go to Iceland if you have the chance. Everyone who goes there… it’s like some kind of therapy. And the Isle of Skye is an incredible place. Did you stay in Portree? The last time I went there, I was hitching, and… [Pause] No, I’m not even gonna tell you. Something bad happened, and basically, I can’t go to Portree anymore. [Laughs] There’s some big fisherman that’s gonna punch me, and I don’t know what he looks like. All I know is his name is Big Murdo.

On a happier note, perhaps, the Hound has a very intense female fanbase.
Oh, really?

Has that registered with you?
Well, I’m aware that there’s fans and they like the Hound, yes. I get letters and all sorts of requests. Yeah, I’m aware of it. It doubles your chance on a Saturday night. [Laughs] I’ve gone to a few conventions and they all go crazy! I’m obviously having some effect, because the times when they have a photo opportunity, you can feel them shaking. Really trembling, like it’s a really big deal. At the end of the day, if there’s a whole line of them, you end up with a sweaty side because of their arms around you.

Maybe they’re scared. I mean, you are the Hound.
I do use that sometimes. If I’m in a pub and I’m not in the mood, people kind of accept it. I remember drinking with Peter Dinklage at a Belfast pub, and you could feel them creeping toward us. I just turned around and went “Fuck off.” They took it right away: “The Hound told me to fuck off, so I fucked off, because he’d kill me if I didn’t.” It probably made their day. [Laughs]

But I do find it a bit overwhelming. Name a city in a random country, and I’ll go to a bar with my head down, and within the first beer someone will go, “Oh my God, you’re the Hound!” I think, “Fuckin’ hell, this is a big show.” It was only a few years ago that I painted bridges on the end of a rope for a living. I’m still waiting for that hand on the shoulder, to say “Okay, fine, I’ll get my coat.” I’m very lucky, and very grateful for it.

You’ve earned the part at this point.
I think I really only got the part because my sister fucked up. She was supposed to print out what I was meant to learn for the audition speech, but she sent me the wrong one — only two or three lines, that was it. I was waiting in this heat wave in London at the casting director’s place, and I see everyone reading this big speech for the Hound about how he got his face burned. I had to delay my meeting for four hours so I could learn it. By that time, I was fucking raging. When I walked into the room, I knew I had to go crazy, so I unleashed all this. It was just a fluke that day — I was just especially angry. [Laughs] Something worked.

Games of Thrones star Rory McCann on his meteoric rise from carpenter to fantasy TV star

SOURCE: Daily Record
AUTHOR: Brian McIver
DATE: 31 March 2014
ORIGINAL: Click here
ARCHIVE: Click here
NOTE: Given other articles I’ve got here and what this one says, it sounds like he spent about two years in Iceland in total, 2006 to 2008.

—–

THE Scots actor tells how he returned to Iceland to film the new series of the hit TV show just six years after working in the country as a carpenter.

EVERY Game Of Thrones cast member knows how lucky they are to be in this international blockbuster series.

But for Scots star Rory McCann, it really hit home when he set off to film the new series in Iceland – because the last time he visited the country he was living in a tent and working as a carpenter.

The 6ft star had been making a Viking drama on the island six years ago when the acting roles dried up and he decided to stay there, getting work as a chippie to make ends meet.

And he admitted that when he was back there to shoot season four of Game Of Thrones, which returns on Sky Atlantic next week, he couldn’t believe how much his life had changed – so much so, he had to keep pinching himself.

Rory, 44, stars in the HBO phenomenon as The Hound, a fearsome, disfigured warrior who has become one of the central characters in the ensemble epic.

The actor, who also worked as a landscape gardener and bridge painter, said: “I pinch myself all the time – we were shooting in Iceland this year and thinking that it was only six years ago I was working as a carpenter in Iceland. Now I’m back and swanning around in a chauffeur-driven car and part of one of the biggest TV shows in the world. I’m a very lucky boy.

“I had made a Viking film with Gerry Butler and after filming, I just went, ‘I’m staying’ and was there for 11 months. There wasn’t any acting work at the time.

“I had said to my agent to phone if anything was happening but it wasn’t, so I just stayed.

“It was coming into winter and some locals told me I was the only man on the whole island living in a tent, so they helped me get into a house and I found work as a carpenter. The people are so friendly and I loved it there. I would go back in a minute.

“I came back to the UK when a friend of mine told me about a job cutting down trees in Windsor after the hurricane there. Soon after that the Attila The Hun job came along and I was off again.

“I am very lucky in that if I don’t get a job for six months or a year, I’ve got other things I can do and am fit enough to still do physical work. I don’t have a mortgage or kids, so I can lie low and tighten my belt if I need to.”

Given the massive success of Game Of Thrones, it’s unlikely he’ll be digging out his tools any time soon – his next gig is playing a blacksmith in the new Jimmy McGovern series Banished, set in the colonial days of Australia.

He was working as a painter on the Forth Road Bridge when he got his big break as the Scott’s Porage Oats man, walking vested and kilted through the country.

That advert got him noticed and he was later working as a landscape gardener for Scottish writer Annie Griffin when she handed him the script for his first TV gig, cult Scots comedy The Book Group, playing a wheelchair-bound sportsman.

Until his Icelandic sabbatical, he worked on TV shows like State Of Play and Rockface, as well as films such as Young Adam, Oliver Stone’s Alexander and Hot Fuzz.

After Iceland, he worked on Clash Of The Titans and Solomon Kane, before getting the dream job in Game Of Thrones.

Based on the books by George RR Martin, the show tells the multi-stranded story of the fight for the throne of the seven kingdoms of Westeros, which is a grimy medieval world filled with sex and violence and magic.

Rory plays Sandor Clegane, aka The Hound, who was once the bodyguard of the treacherous Lannister family, but who is now a roaming warrior travelling the country with Arya, the pre-teen orphan of heroic Ned Stark (Sean Bean) whose execution at the end of the first season sparked the wars that have defined the series.

Rory, who lives near Stirling, said: “It’s incredible, a great thing to be part of. When I started, they told me a rough synopsis and I sped read the first book.

“Once I found out more, I realised there was a history to it and such a huge following.

“The pilot was shot in Doune Castle so I thought, ‘Here we go, I could be cycling to work’ and it’s a shame that didn’t continue but we film in Belfast and I’ve really enjoyed the trips over there.”

Rory is also one of a few central characters to survive the curse of the ninth episode three years on the trot. Traditionally, the penultimate episode of each season is a bloodbath.

Rory joked: “Aye, when you get the script in for episode nine, you get a large glass of whisky before you open the first page and think, ‘Right, here we go, is it all over and time to get your coat?’

“Anyone who is still alive to get to season four has done very well and it’s a wonder there is anyone left alive, given the amount of death and destruction.

“I’m still just grateful for the part and we’re all happy to be here. My secret is that I make sloe berry gin at home and keep giving it to George Martin, so he keeps me in his tales.”

And while he can’t reveal too much about the plot for season four, Rory promised fans it will be bigger and better.

“I was just in New York for the premiere and it’s looking great. The pressure is always on as they are always looking to step things up. After the red wedding and they got rid of half the cast, I was thinking we have a right good chance of moving into The Hound’s storylines.

“We see him and Arya on their mad road trip, leaving a trail of destruction in their wake and arguing all the way so somehow it’s funny as well.

“We seem to be doing double the swordplay and I’ve still got bruises from the fights.

“There are some moves that have never been seen before.”

Following his own brief encounter with Doune Castle, Rory has been watching with interest the development of Outlander, the new Sam Heughan series, which has been filming in Central Scotland recently.

It’s been billed as a rival for Thrones but Rory is delighted the new show is on the way.

“I’m really excited to see it. I know Sam, an absolute gentleman.

“Something like that being made here is just what Scotland needs and it’s great news for everyone.”