‘Game of Thrones’: Actress Emilia Clarke Shares Why She’s Afraid of Getting Fired From Filming the Series

‘Game of Thrones’: Actress Emilia Clarke Shares Why She’s Afraid of Getting Fired From Filming the Series
‘Game of Thrones’: Actress Emilia Clarke Shares Why She’s Afraid of Getting Fired From Filming the Series

In an interview given to Big Issue magazine this Monday, June 10, British actress Emilia Clarke, aka Daenerys Targaryen in the hit series “Game of Thrones” returned to her fears of being fired by production after suffering two hemorrhages cerebral.

We couldn’t imagine “Game of Thrones” without her, and yet, Emilia Clarke was afraid of getting fired from the set. This is what the interpreter of Daenerys Targaryen in the hit series produced by HBO confesses in the columns of the magazine Big Issue this Monday, June 10.

Five years after the end of the program which revealed it, the British actress returned to the difficulties she encountered returning to work after suffering two strokes. She says in particular that she was worried about her future in the series. “Am I going to get fired? Am I going to be fired because they think I’m not capable of doing my job?” asked the 37-year-old actress.

Two aneurysm ruptures in two years

After her first ruptured aneurysm in 2011, Emilia Clarke lost the ability to speak. She was then 24 years old. “A stroke alters your perception of yourself in a very significant way, and any insecurities you feel when entering the job market are multiplied by four overnight”, she explains. His second attack was in 2013, two years later.

The star, however, has turned her health problems into a strength. “If I hadn’t had a brain hemorrhage, I might have become an old bitch thinking I’m owed everything by living in Hollywood. I’m so much more aware of what’s happening, when it’s happening. product”, she had already confided to Harper’s Bazaar in a previous interview.

As recalled BFMTV, Emilia Clarke co-founded the charity SameYou with her mother in 2019, which helps victims of stroke. Their work earned them the title of Member of the Order of the British Empire, awarded by Prince William last February.

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