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Classic Hollywood: Oscar Winner Claire Trevor Profile

Dead End Poster

Claire Trevor’s heyday was in the 1940s and 1950s. She was a consummate actress who never gave a bad performance. She has a gold Academy Award® statuette for her stunning and poignant performance in Humphrey Bogart’s 1948 hit Key Largo and an Oscar® nomination for her role in the exciting John Wayne aviation hit of 1954, The High and the Mighty. Earlier in her career she was honored with her first Oscar® nomination for Best Supporting Actress in 1937’s Dead End.

She was a beautiful woman, sometimes blonde, sometimes a brunette depending on the role she was playing. But she wasn’t beautiful in the way Golden Age beauties Lana Turner or Ava Gardner were. She had her own style, tough and vulnerable at the same time. That’s what made her so appealing to both men and women. Men wanted to ravage and tame her and women wanted to be like her.

Claire Trevor was born Claire Wemlinger on March 8, 1909 in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, New York. Her father, a merchant on Fifth Avenue, moved the family to the more prestigious Larchmont in Westchester County where Claire grew up. She always had leaned toward the artistic community and, after graduating from high school, attended Columbia University and studied art. She left there and sauntered over to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. They taught her about acting, which led to “paying her dues” acting in small repertory theatres on Long Island and far away St. Louis and Michigan. She graduated to the big time when she appeared in the hit Broadway play “Whistling in the Dark.” Unfortunately, her next appearance was in the flopperoo The Party’s Over. It was.


Luckily for Claire, a talent scout from Fox Films (not yet 20th Century Fox) signed her to an iron-clad five-year contract in 1933 to appear in whatever they wanted her to do, good or bad. It turned out most of the pictures were cheap “B” programmers, Westerns and melodramas. In those days, contract players were mostly slaves — glamorous slaves, at that — and Ms. Trevor was treated no differently. She worked day and night on an exhaustive schedule to crank out 14 quickies during the next few years. It was difficult but it served as a sort of match-book cover school of acting.

During the 1930s she appeared as leading lady in more than 30 potboilers, always lending the film a little something extra it didn’t have without her. By 1937 she was well-established in Hollywood and the major directors began to notice her.

Producer Samuel Goldwyn bought the screen rights to the hit Broadway play Dead End by writer Sidney Kingsley in the late 1930s. Set in the slums of New York, it marks the first time the Dead End Kids appeared in a film. Starring was the wonderful actress Sylvia Sidney. Handsome Joel McCrea was the leading man and Humphrey Bogart played Baby Face Martin, the thug who goes wrong. Claire Trevor, at 26, was signed to play Francie, the ex-girlfriend of Baby Face, now a prostitute suffering from the final stages of an STD. It was a wonderful part for Trevor, and director William Wyler guided her to win an Academy Award® nomination as Best Supporting Actress. Dead End catapulted Trevor into the big leagues.

Although Trevor made 68 films in her career, we are highlighting only five of her excellent roles. In 1938 she made four more films. But it was in 1939 when she made what is perhaps the capstone of her movie career. Director John Ford cast her in his film about the American West, Stagecoach. It has been selected by the Library of Congress as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” and as such, was selected for preservation by the National Film Registry.

Stagecoach was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Art Direction (Alexander Toluboff), Best Cinematography (Bert Glennon), Best Film Editing (Dorothy Spencer, Otho Lovering) and won Oscars® for Thomas Mitchell as Best Supporting Actor and Best Music Scoring for Leo Shuken, John Leipold, W. Franke Harling, and Richard Hageman.

The film had been rejected by every studio in town when John Ford presented it for production. Westerns were not in favor. Ford insisted on using John Wayne in the picture, but he was not an A-list actor and had been in dozens of low-budget oaters in the 1930s that had been mostly flops. Nobody would finance a film starring Wayne. Independent producer Walter Wanger insisted on having Marlene Dietrich and Gary Cooper star. Ford still insisted on John Wayne and compromised on the budget if Claire Trevor got top billing and Wayne would be second. And that is how Ms. Trevor became the star of Stagecoach. She has gone down in the annals of Hollywood history as being the major female actress in one of the greatest Westerns ever made!

The 1940s were top-earning years for Trevor. In addition to all of her films she appeared regularly on popular radio shows with film stars Edward G. Robinson (Double Indemnity) and Don Ameche (Down Argentine Way). By the time she made another of her significant films in 1944, she starred in nine films including Honky Tonk, The Woman of the Town, and The Desperadoes.

Film noir was beginning to gain popularity in the ’40s. RKO Studios bought author Raymond Chandler’s Farewell, My Lovely novel that had been a huge hit in 1940. Director Edward Dmytryk managed to wrestle through the usual convoluted Chandler plot to make one of the best interpretations of the author’s work. Former Warner Bros. crooner Dick Powell (42nd Street) changed career directions to play the hard-boiled private detective Philip Marlowe. To ensure audiences didn’t think the film was a musical because of Powell’s starring role, the studio changed the title to Murder, My Sweet. Claire Trevor was given the difficult task to play two different women—one as Velma Valento, a singer in a lugubrious nightclub, and the other as Helen, (wicked step-mother to Ann) who is married to Ann’s wealthy father whom she intends to take to the cleaners. Ann is cub newspaper reporter Ann Grayle, played by the lovely Anne Shirley. She had made a name for herself as an actress in Anne of Green Gables in 1934 and later as the wife of screenwriter Charles Lederer (His Girl Friday) in 1949. There are a lot of Ann’s involved to make it more confusing.

Murder, My Sweet became one of the top hit pictures of 1944. It is considered one of the best adaptations of Chandler’s work, which contains one of Claire Trevor’s best roles.

After making seven more pictures, this brought Trevor to 1948, a banner year, indeed. She was cast in director John Huston’s Warner Bros. noir film, Key Largo. The stars were Humphrey Bogart as Maj. Frank McCloud, Edward G. Robinson as Johnny Rocco, Lauren Bacall as Nora Temple, Lionel Barrymore as Bacall’s father-in-law James Temple, and Claire Trevor as Gaye Dawn. When a violent tropical storm tosses up strangers to a remote island hotel, several of the men are members of gangster Johnny Rocco’s thugs. Trevor plays an alcoholic, washed up girlfriend of Rocco’s who is a broken-down nightclub singer. Robinson is at his best as the consummate gangster and plays it to the hilt. In the scene which won Trevor her Oscar© as Best Supporting Actress, director Huston would not let her rehearse it and made her sing it cold in one take. The song was “Moanin’ Low,” made popular in 1929 about a woman caught in a relationship with a mean, cruel man. That man was Robinson, and he made her sing it before giving her a drink. She needed the drink and began suffering alcoholic tremors. Trevor began the song and slowly deteriorated throughout the verses until she finally cracks. Trevor was superb in the scene. She showed the gamut of emotions from humiliation, anxiety, fear, and yearning for physical relief at her final breakdown. It is probably Trevor’s best and most poignant performance.

High and the Mighty

One of the most famous of Trevor’s pictures was an early aviation disaster story. Author Ernest K. Gann was a pilot himself, so he wrote what he knew. The novel was a hit in 1953, and the film was made for Wayne-Fellows Productions for a Warner Bros. release in 1954. Director William A. Wellman shot The High and the Mighty for $1.4 million and the film grossed more than 8 times its cost. When a plane takes off from Honolulu for a flight to San Francisco, John Wayne and Robert Stack are guiding the plane. On board are 17 passengers, all of whom seem to have personal problems to the extreme. Flight Attendant Spalding (starlet Doe Avedon) does her best to take care of their needs. Society Heiress Lydia Rice (Laraine Day) can’t seem to cope with being pampered, aging beauty queen Sally McKee (Jan Sterling) is upset about fading, and spoiled movie actress May Holst (Claire Trevor) has a jaded view of life.

When the plane develops engine trouble over the Pacific past the point of no return, the picture picks up excitement and the cast earns their bloated salaries. Both Sterling and Trevor compete for screen time to see which one is the best. In an unprecedented move never before seen on screen, Sterling actually removes all her make-up to show how horrible she really looks. It’s a scene-stealer. Claire Trevor one-ups her with her jaded view of life and sharp-tongued dialogue. Both actresses were cited numerous times for their performances and both were nominated as Best Supporting Actress in the Oscar® race that year. It was Trevor’s final Academy Award® nomination.

Ms. Trevor lived on and performed on many television shows well into the 1980s. She died on April 8, 2000 at the age of 91.

Bob Odenkirk to Star in AMC’s ‘The Night of the Gun’

Bob Odenkirk in Better Call Saul
Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill in a scene from ‘Better Call Saul’ (Photo: Lewis Jacobs / AMC)

David Carr’s critically acclaimed memoir The Night of the Gun is being made into a six-part miniseries by AMC and Sony Pictures Television, with Better Call Saul star Bob Odenkirk attached to star and The Shield‘s Shawn Ryan adapting Carr’s life story for the series. Odenkirk, who will be playing journalist David Carr, will also executive produce with Ryan, Marc Provissiero, and Joshua Astrachan. Eileen Myers (Masters of Sex, Mad Dogs) is also on board as a writer and executive producer.

“David Carr’s work as a journalist was uncompromising, enlightening, and most of all, always driven by a fundamental quest for the truth. When he turned those skills and values around to focus on his own life as an addict, the result was a stunningly original, compelling and important piece of journalism the likes of which the world had never seen – a simultaneously heartbreaking, funny, and inspirational account that redefined the idea of telling a personal story,” said Joel Stillerman, president of original programming and development for AMC and SundanceTV. “Shawn Ryan, Bob Odenkirk, and the incredible team behind this have embraced all the things that David would have loved as a storyteller, and crafted a vision for The Night of the Gun that we hope will be as timeless as David’s book.”


The Night of the Gun is an incredible tale of a journalist’s search for the truth about the most painful subject of his career — himself. David Carr’s autobiography is a searing, hysterical look at the demon of addiction and his journey from the crack pipe to esteemed columnist for The New York Times,” stated Ryan. “I couldn’t be more honored to help bring his story to life, especially with the immensely talented Bob Odenkirk as an actor and creative partner.”

“I read David’s story, The Night of the Gun, when it came out and was wildly entertained by his saga. It’s a story of survival filled with pain, crack, journalistic righteousness, abandoned cars, crooks, lies, and then there’s the two little girls who saved his life; it’s overstuffed with humanity,” Odenkirk said. “Shawn Ryan is the man to explore this real anti-hero story. I hope to do justice to David’s intellect and his scrappy nature. It’s gonna be crazy… if we do it right.”

‘Outlander’ Season 2 Finale to Introduce Brianna and Roger

Caitriona Balfe Sam Heughan Outlander
Caitriona Balfe and Sam Heughan in ‘Outlander’ (Photo © 2016 Sony Pictures Television Inc)

The final episode of Starz’ Outlander season two will be extended from 60 minutes to 90 minutes. Starz just announced the longer season finale and revealed the episode will be titled “Dragonfly in Amber,” which is the name of the second book in Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series. The season two finale will air on July 9, 2016 at 9pm ET/PT and will introduce both Brianna (played by Sophie Skelton) and Roger Wakefield (Richard Rankin), two key characters from the books who will impact the story as it moves forward into season three.


Prior to the premiere of Outlander‘s second season finale, Starz will air a marathon of all 12 season two episodes. The Outlander marathon will kick off on July 2, 2016 at 12pm ET/PT.

Details on Season 2, Episode 13 – “Dragonfly in Amber”

Flashing forward to 1968, Claire (Caitriona Balfe) travels to Scotland with her twenty-year-old daughter, Brianna, and meets Roger Wakefield. Claire visits Lallybroch and Culloden Moor to make peace with the past, while Brianna and Roger bond over researching Randall family history. Claire finally reveals the truth to Brianna about her time travel through the stones, her life in 1700’s Scotland, and Brianna’s true parentage. The story is intercut with another one back in the 18th century, which happens on the day of the Battle of Culloden. When Jamie’s last ditch attempts to deter The Prince fail, he and Claire come up with a dangerous plan – which Dougal overhears, inciting him to a murderous rage. Jamie (Sam Heughan) must do everything he can to save the ones he loves, even if it means saying goodbye to some – or all – of them.

Mumford & Sons Announce New 2016 Tour Dates

Mumford and Sons Poster

Mumford & Sons announced an eight date tour that will take the group to cities including Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Albuquerque. The Austin 5000 Tour will kick off in Vegas on September 23rd and will finish up on October 9th in Austin, Texas. The tour is named “after the many miles the band will have clocked by the time they finish, it’s a drive around their twin headline performances at Austin City Limits in the Fall,” according to the band’s official website.

Tickets will go on sale beginning June 10, 2016 via mumfordandsons.com/tour.

The British band’s set to release a new mini album titled Johannesburg this month. Johannesburg was recorded in 48 hours during the band’s tour of South Africa earlier this year. The album will feature Senegalese vocalist Baaba Maal, Malaawi duo The Very Best, and Cape Town’s Beatenberg.Tickets for the Austin 5000 tour goes on sale throughon Friday 10th June.

Mumford & Sons The Austin 5000 Tour


23rd – 25th September – Life Is Beautiful, Las Vegas
26th September – USANA Amphitheatre, Salt Lake City*
28th September – Fiddler’s Green Amphitheatre, Englewood*
30th September – 2nd October – Austin City Limits, Austin
4th October – Isleta Amphitheater, Albuquerque*
5th October – Ak-Chin Pavilion, Phoenix*
6th October – Sleep Train Amphitheatre, Chula Vista*
7th – 9th October – Austin City Limits, Austin

* – Support from Catfish & The Bottlemen

Superman Will Appear in ‘Supergirl’ Season 2

Melissa Benoist Mehcad Brooks Supergirl
Melissa Benoist and Mehcad Brooks in ‘Supergirl’ (Photo © 2015 CBS Broadcasting, Inc)

Supergirl‘s making the leap from CBS to The CW for its second season and it appears Superman will be part of at least a few episodes in the new season. The CW officially confirmed Superman will be appearing in Supergirl season two, however the role is still in the casting stage. Superman was often referenced in season one, but never appeared in a guest starring role in the show’s rookie season.


“Greg Berlanti, Ali Adler and I are beyond thrilled to welcome Clark Kent and his slightly-more-famous alter ego to the world of Supergirl,” said executive producer Andrew Kreisberg. “Superman will be appearing in the first two episodes of the new season and we cannot wait to see who next dons the red cape!”

Fans of the DC universe can also expect to see epic crossover episodes mixing the worlds of Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow and Supergirl.

The Supergirl cast is led by Melissa Benoist as Kara Danvers/Supergirl. Mehcad Brooks plays James Olsen, Laura Benanti is Alura Zor-El, Calista Flockhart stars as Cat Grant, Chyler Leigh plays Alexandra “Alex” Danvers, Jeremy Jordan is Winslow “Winn” Schott, Jenna Dewan Tatum is Lucy Lane, David Harewood stars as Hank Henshaw, and Peter Facinelli is Maxwell Lord. Dean Cain and Helen Slater guest starred as Kara’s adoptive Earth parents, Jeremiah and Eliza Danvers.

‘Zootopia’ Crosses $1 Billion at the Box Office

Zootopia Bunny, Fox and Sloth
Judy Hopps (voice of Ginnifer Goodwin), Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman), and a sloth at the Department of Mammal Vehicles in ‘Zootopia’ (Photo © 2015 Disney)

Zootopia has made it past the $1 billion mark at the worldwide box office as of June 5, 2016 after 13 weeks in theatrical release. The Walt Disney Animation Studios film opened domestically with a $75 million weekend (the biggest animated opening ever for a March release) and has earned the title of the number one grossing animated movie of 2016. To date, Zootopia has brought in $337.2 million domestically and $663 million internationally.


Zootopia is now Disney’s 11th film to cross the billion dollar bar, and the second film from the studio to do so in 2016 (Captain America: Civil War is the other Disney release). It’s also only the fourth animated movie ever to make it to $1 billion in global box office receipts. And, only Frozen has grossed more among Disney Animation’s original films. Directed by Byron Howard (Bolt), Rich Moore (Wreck-It Ralph), and Jared Bush, Zootopia features the voices of Once Upon a Time‘s Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Shakira, Idris Elba, J.K. Simmons, Nate Torrence, Jenny Slate, Tommy Chong, Octavia Spencer, Bonnie Hunt, Don Lake, Alan Tudyk, Tommy “Tiny” Lister, Raymond Persi, Katie Lowes, Jesse Corti, and John DiMaggio.

Zootopia Plot: The modern mammal metropolis of Zootopia is a city like no other. Comprised of habitat neighborhoods like ritzy Sahara Square and frigid Tundratown, it’s a melting pot where animals from every environment live together—a place where no matter what you are, from the biggest elephant to the smallest shrew, you can be anything. But when rookie Officer Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) arrives, she discovers that being the first bunny on a police force of big, tough animals isn’t so easy. Determined to prove herself, she jumps at the opportunity to crack a case, even if it means partnering with a fast-talking, scam-artist fox, Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman), to solve the mystery.

‘The Legend of Tarzan’ Trailer #3 – More Alexander Skarsgard, More Animals

Legend of Tarzan Alexander Skarsgard
Alexander Skarsgard in ‘The Legend of Tarzan’ (Photo by Jonathan Olley © Warner Bros Entertainment)

Warner Bros Pictures has released the third trailer for the action adventure film The Legend of Tarzan starring Alexander Skarsgard. Directed by Harry Potter‘s David Yates, the new Tarzan movie also stars Margot Robbie as Jane, Christoph Waltz, Djimon Hounsou, John Hurt, Jim Broadbent, and Samuel L. Jackson. Adam Cozad and Craig Brewer wrote the script based on Edgar Rice Burroughs’ stories, with Yates, Susan Ekins, Nikolas Korda, Keith Goldberg, Mike Richardson and Bruce Berman executive producing. The Legend of Tarzan will open in theaters on July 1, 2016.


Skarsgard’s credits include True Blood, Generation Kill, The Diary of a Teenage Girl, The East, and What Maisie Knew.

The Plot: It has been years since the man once known as Tarzan (Skarsgård) left the jungles of Africa behind for a gentrified life as John Clayton III, Lord Greystoke, with his beloved wife, Jane (Robbie) at his side. Now, he has been invited back to the Congo to serve as a trade emissary of Parliament, unaware that he is a pawn in a deadly convergence of greed and revenge, masterminded by the Belgian, Captain Leon Rom (Waltz). But those behind the murderous plot have no idea what they are about to unleash.

Watch The Legend of Tarzan trailer:

Black Sails’ Luke Roberts to Star in ‘Ransom’

Luke Roberts in Black Sails
Luke Roberts as Woodes Rogers in ‘Black Sails’ (Photo © 2016 Starz Entertainment, LLC)
Luke Roberts, Woodes Rogers on Starz’ Black Sails, is set to star in CBS and Entertainment One’s Ransom as just announced by Global and TF1. CBS recently signed on as the series’ broadcast partner, with filming expected to get underway soon in Canada and Europe. CBS is targeting a 2017 premiere of the dramatic series which will have a 13 episode season one. The X-FilesFrank Spotnitz is executive producing along with series creator David Vainola (Combat Hospital).

“We are delighted to partner with CBS, TF1 and Global to bring Ransom to screens around the globe,” said John Morayniss, Chief Executive Officer, eOne Television. “We are especially grateful to the Wildcats team, who brought the IP on which the show is inspired, Sienna Films with whom we have a longstanding and successful relationship, and Frank Spotnitz whose talent and vast experience will ensure delivery of a top notch show.”


“The world of crisis negotiation is incredibly compelling, as demonstrated by the fascinating real-life cases Laurent Combalbert has negotiated,” said Frank Spotnitz, Big Light Productions. “Laurent has inspired a brilliant and complex character, and you can’t help but be moved seeing all the lives he’s saved around the world.”

“As CBS continues to program year round, we are always looking for series that can fit seamlessly within our schedule and connect with our viewers,” said Glenn Geller, President, CBS Entertainment. “Ransom brings a compelling new approach to a character driven crime drama with a sense of urgency and closure in each episode.”

The Plot: Ransom follows crisis and hostage negotiator Eric Beaumont (Luke Roberts), whose team is brought in to save lives when no one else can. Eric understands criminals better than they do, and uses his insight into human behaviour to resolve the most difficult kidnap and ransom cases. Despite the stakes, Eric refuses to resort to violence, even when confronted by some of the most dangerous criminals in the world. While Eric’s considerable powers of manipulation make him the best at what he does professionally, they often complicate his relationships with family, friends and colleagues. Is Eric being himself, or who he needs to be in order to get what he wants? The difference is often hard to tell. The series begins with Eric taking on Maxine Carlson, a new member of the team eager to prove herself. But a dangerous secret from Maxine’s past may pose a threat that even the great Eric Beaumont is unable to resolve.

Box Office: ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2’ Tops the Chart With an Okay Opening

Stephen Amell Megan Fox Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Out of the Shadows
Stephen Amell as Casey Jones and Megan Fox as April O’Neil in ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows’ (Photo © 2015 Paramount Pictures)

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows was down 46% from 2014’s TMNT, however it still managed to snag the top spot on the box office chart, stealing it away from X-Men: Apocalypse. Opening with $35 million domestically, TMNT 2 is following in the footsteps of recent sequels that have had a hard time cashing in on their predecessor’s popularity including Neighbors 2 and Alice Through the Looking Glass. However, the sequel has earned better reviews from critics and audiences even awarded it an A- CinemaScore so it’s probable Paramount isn’t ready to call it quits on the franchise just yet.

The weekend’s two other big releases, Me Before You and Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping, finished in third and eighth place, respectively. Me Before You went after women and pulled off a surprising $18 million opening weekend which is better than anyone expected of the PG-13 rated romantic drama. The news wasn’t quite so sunny for Popstar which earned decent reviews but failed to find an audience, ringing up just $4.63 million over its first three days in release.

Box Office Top 10: June 3-5, 2016


  1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows – $35,250,000
  2. X-Men: Apocalypse – $22,325,000
  3. Me Before You – $18,270,000
  4. Alice Through the Looking Glass – $10,691,000
  5. The Angry Birds Movie – $9,775,000
  6. Captain America: Civil War – $7,591,000
  7. Neighbors 2 – $4,700,000
  8. Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping – $4,630,000
  9. The Jungle Book – $4,247,000
  10. The Nice Guys – $3,520,000

‘Game of Thrones’ Recap Season 6 Episode 7: “The Broken Man”

Game of Thrones Season 6 Episode 7 Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
Jerome Flynn and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau in ‘Game of Thrones’ (Photo: Helen Sloan / HBO)

HBO’s Game of Thrones season six episode seven brought back two characters, one of whom viewers assumed was dead and one who was just missed because he’s a supporting player who hasn’t gotten in any recent screen time. The episode also introduced a new character played by Ian McShane and found the Stark siblings on the road trying to drum up support for their quest to regain Winterfell from the Boltons. And speaking of the Boltons, Ramsay was once again absent from the story. Also left out of episode seven was the gang at Meereen as well as Dany, her dragon, and the Dothrakis. Tommen was mentioned but didn’t put in an appearance, and Bran/the new Three-Eyed Raven was left out in the cold which, in retrospect, is better than what happened to his sister, Arya, in this episode.

The Recap:

The episode begins with Ian McShane showing up as a character who isn’t referred to by name. Readers of George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire will recognize the character as Septon Meribald from Martin’s A Feast For Crows. Septon Meribald and his followers are busy building what could be a new place of worship, happily going about their day with the men doing the construction work and the women cooking. And yes, there he is! Sandor ‘The Hound’ Clegane is alive and kicking. Welcome back, Rory McCann. Septon Meribald asks how many men it took to take him down, and The Hound admits it was a woman who got the better of him. The Septon discusses the moment when he first stumbled upon The Hound, describing him as nearly dead, stinking to high heaven, and with a bone sticking out of his leg. The Hound says it is hate that kept him alive when he should have died, but Septon Meribald says God’s not done with him yet and that’s why he’s still alive. The Hound asks if the gods are real, why haven’t they punished him, and the Septon responds, “They have.”

At King’s Landing, Margaery (Natalie Dormer) is busy reading The Book of The Mother when the High Sparrow stops by for a visit. Margaery’s got the text memorized and the High Sparrow’s impressed. Margaery’s back on the “I only pretended to love the poor and the needy” kick, and the High Sparrow agrees that is sometimes what happens. The High Sparrow’s purpose for the visit is to find out why she hasn’t joined her husband in their marriage bed, and Margaery says those desires no longer drive her like they used to. The High Sparrow reminds her King Tommen must have an heir or they won’t be able to continue their work. The High Sparrow is about to leave when he casually tosses out a major announcement: he fears for Lady Tyrell’s safety if she doesn’t repent.

Margaery meets with her grandmother (Diana Rigg) with the ever-watchful Septa Unella (Hannah Waddingham) close by. Lady Tyrell wants Unella to leave but of course she won’t. Margaery seems fine with Septa Unella’s hovering presence, telling her grandmother that Loris’ only hope for release from his imprisonment is to confess and repent. If he doesn’t, he’ll remain caged up. Lady Tyrell is beside herself and wants Margaery to return home immediately. Margaery tells her grandmother it’s she who should leave King’s Landing as soon as possible, squeezing her hand and passing a note as a signal that she’s faking at least part of this pious act. Lady Tyrell opens the note when she’s alone and it’s a drawing of a single rose.

Jon Snow (Kit Harington), Sansa Stark (Sophie Turner), and Tormund (Kristofer Hivju) meet with the Wildlings who are reluctant to follow Jon Snow to battle. They don’t believe his war is their war, but Tormund reminds them it’s because of Jon Snow that they’re safe. Jon tells them everyone will be coming for them if he loses at Winterfell. He tells the Wildlings he needs them with him if he’s going to win the North back. Tormund reminds them Jon Snow died for them at the hands of his Brothers and if they’re not willing to do the same for him, then they’re cowards. The giant rises, says, “Snow,” and leaves the group. That ringing endorsement prompts the rest of the Wildlings to commit to the cause. Jon asks if Tormund’s sure they’ll come, and Tormund says if they pledge to do something, they’ll do it. The Wildlings are now officially #TeamStark.

Cersei (Lena Headey) meets with Lady Tyrell and asks if she’s actually planning on leaving. Lady Tyrell blames everything on Cersei, telling her that their two houses are on the verge of collapse because of her. And, for once, Cersei accepts the full blame. “I wonder if you’re the worst person I’ve ever met?” asks Lady Tyrell. She reminds Cersei about the way she smirked when her granddaughter and grandson were put in cells. Lady Tyrell says she’s definitely leaving and Cersei should too, but Cersei won’t leave her son. Lady Tyrell rubs in the fact that Cersei’s family is gone, the people despise her, and she should leave while she can. “You’ve lost, Cersei. It’s the only joy I can find in all this misery,” says Lady Tyrell, fully enjoying seeing Cersei squirm.

Next we get to catch up with the buddy comedy team of Jaime (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and Bronn (Jeremy Flynn). They’ve been separated for too long but now they’re back leading the Lannister army to Riverrun. Jaime and Bronn have a nifty little exchange about commanding armies, and Jaime calls Bronn his right hand that he lost. Bronn stops him from completing the old Lannister saying of “a Lannnister always…” as they walk through the Frey army. They listen in as the Frey boys threaten the Blackfish with the hanging of Lord Edmure Tully (Tobias Menzies who’s been keeping busy with Outlander while Edmure’s been locked up). If he doesn’t yield the castle, Edmure dies. A Frey reminds the Blackfish that he sliced his niece’s throat ear-to-ear, but the Blackfish responds by saying, “Go on, then, cut his throat.” They don’t – just as the Blackfish expected. Up walks Jaime telling the Freys they allowed 8,000 men to approach unchallenged. The siege is now under Jaime’s command and he wants Edmure bathed as soon as possible. Bronn tells the Frey army to dig trenches, and then Jaime requests Bronn get word to the Blackfish that he wants a parley. Again we’re treated to the comedy act of Bronn and Jaime as they discuss who would win in a fight: Jaime or the Blackfish.

Sansa, Jon, and Sir Davos (Liam Cunningham) visit the young but confident Lady Lyanna Mormont who rules Bear Island. Jon Snow tells Lady Mormont he served under her uncle at Castle Black, explaining Robb Stark is gone but House Stark is not and they want House Mormont’s allegiance. Lady Mormont consults her advisors and says Jon is a Snow and Sansa is a Bolton, something Sansa immediately takes issue with, replying that she’s always been a Stark. Jon reiterates that they need to fight Ramsay Bolton but Lady Mormont wants to know why she should sacrifice another life on Bear Island for someone else’s war. Sir Davos speaks up, telling her he understands how she feels. He explains his background and that he’s here because this isn’t someone else’s war, “It’s our war.” Lyanna’s uncle made Jon his stewart because Jon had the courage to do what was right. The real war is between the living and the dead, and Mormont knew that. Davos says, “Make no mistake, my lady, the dead are coming.” Davos continues his speech, telling Lyanna a divided North won’t stand a chance against the Night King and advising they all need to fight together to get back Winterfell. House Mormont has kept faith with House Stark for 1,000 years, “We will not break faith today,” says Lady Mormont. They pledge 62 fighting men. They are not a large House but every man from Bear Island fights with the strength of 10.

Jaime rides through the troops and approaches the gates to Riverrun. Archers keep him in their sights as the drawbridge lowers. Brynden “The Blackfish” Tully (Clive Russell), surrounded by some of his men, is on the other side. He meets Jaime in the middle and asks after Sansa and Arya. Jaime admits he doesn’t have them and he’s there to get the castle back for the Freys. Hundreds will die if the Blackfish doesn’t surrender, with the Blackfish responding by saying thousands of the Lannister army will die, too. Jaime promises to spare his men if he surrenders, and the Blackfish says he’s ready to die in this castle. “You can either attack or try to starve us out,” says the Blackfish, adding that he has two years’ worth of provisions. The Blackfish only met with Jaime to get his measure, and he’s disappointed with what he sees.

Game of Thrones Season 6 Episode 7 Sophie Turner and Kit Harington
Sophie Turner, Kit Harington, Liam Cunningham, and Tim McInnerny in ‘Game of Thrones’ (Photo: Helen Sloan / HBO)

Once again we’re back with the Starks and this time they’re met with a firm no. Lord Glover isn’t about to help take back Winterfell because the Boltons helped him take back his castle from the Ironborn. Glover asks who else is fighting for the Starks and Jon lists off House Mormont and confirms the bulk of the army is made up of Wildlings. Glover can’t believe the rumors are true and declares House Glover will not fight alongside Wildlings, turning and walking away. Sansa reminds him his House is pledged to the Starks, sworn to answer when called upon. Glover says they were pledged and even followed Robb Stark, but Robb wasn’t there and instead took up with a foreign whore and got himself and those who followed him killed. “House Stark is dead,” says Glover, effectively ending the conversation.

The scene shifts to a bar where Theon (Alfie Allen) appears upset the men and his sister, Yara (Gemma Whelan), are drinking and partying with whores. He won’t drink and can’t have a woman, and his sister tries to get him to relax. She says she’ll never hurt him and Theon wants to know if their uncle is after them. Of course he is, confirms Yara, demanding Theon drink his entire cup. She’s tired of watching him cower and continues to demand he drink the ale. She wants the real Theon back, not this wimpy pretender. She promises they’ll get justice; he corrects her to say justice would be dying at Winterfell. She promises him revenge instead and that they’ll sail to Meereen and make a pact with the Dragon Queen to take back the Iron Islands. Theon, the real Theon, looks at his sister and wordlessly indicates he’s with her.

Sir Davos tells Jon and Sansa they’re camping where Stannis did and Jon says they need to march on Winterfell now, with the three Houses and the Wildlings who’ve pledged their support. Davos runs off to break up a fight while Sansa and Jon discuss whether Davos is worth listening to. Jon wants to fight now, but Sansa believes they need more men. As Jon rushes off to help Davos, Sansa sees that House Mormont has brought ravens. She pens a note and signs it with her name and seal. Who’s it to? I’m guessing she’s finally going to say yes to Petyr ‘Littlefinger’ Baelish’s offer of men to fight for the Starks.

And now we’re back where we began the episode, catching up once again with Septon Meribald who’s delivering George R.R. Martin’s famous Broken Men speech. Septon Meribald is talking to his people about how he used to be a coward who followed orders, doing wrongs to innocent people just because he was told to do so. He wasn’t even worthy of being called an animal because animals are true to their nature. He recalls cutting a young boy’s throat and how that changed everything. He can still hear that child’s mother’s scream, but now he’s just trying to bring a little goodness into the world. It’s never too late to start over, to come back, to start helping people. Just then three men on horses ride up to the group, demanding to know what they’re doing there. The men say they’re just protecting the people, then they ask about food and horses. The Hound stares them down as the leader says, “Stay safe. The night is dark and full of terrors,” before turning and riding away. The Hound tells Septon Meribald that those men were from the Brotherhood and they follow the Red God. He wants to hunt them down because he knows they’ll be back, but Meribald doesn’t think that’s necessary.

On to Braavos where Arya (Maisie Williams) walks through the port and finds a man who agrees to give her passage on his ship. They leave in two days but then she throws him a bag of coins, telling him he’ll leave at dawn instead. She walks away and is alone on a bridge watching boats float by when an old woman approaches. But no – it’s not an elderly woman at all – it’s the Waif in disguise. The Waif grabs Arya and stabs her repeatedly in the stomach. Arya leaps from the bridge, her blood spreading in the ocean while her body is underwater. Surfacing, she crawls to shore, clutching her stomach. Wet, bleeding, and in pain, no one helps her as she staggers through the crowded market.

The Hound is busy chopping wood when he hears a horse in the distance. He returns to the peaceful little group to find they’ve all been slaughtered and Septon Meribald has been hung from the chapel they were building. The Hound stares at him and then turns, grabs his axe, and walks away.

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