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‘Game of Thrones’ Finale: How Lyanna Mormont Became Your New Favorite Character in Just Three Scenes

Answer the call.
Bella Ramsey as Lyanna Mormont on Game of Thrones
HBO

(Spoilers ahead for last night’s “Game of Thrones” finale.) As the current election cycle and Brexit seem so keen to remind us, these are especially contentious political times. Whatever our real-world quibbles, however, “Game of Thrones” gave us all a leader to believe in this season: Lady Lyanna Mormont of Bear Island. Young rulers aren’t uncommon in Westeros, but the sadistic King Joffrey and his younger brother Tommen (R.I.P., and way to make “King’s Landing” take on literal meaning) didn’t inspire a fraction of the confidence that this 10-year-old girl did. In what couldn’t have been more than 15 minutes of screentime across three episodes, Bella Ramsey’s take on the diminutive Lady emerged as a fan favorite.

We first met her just a few short weeks ago, when the newly reunited Jon and Sansa were in coalition-building mode as they sought to reclaim their ancestral home of Winterfell. Support for their once-great house was scattered in the wake of the War of the Five Kings, which ended disastrously for the North and resulted in many lost lives, but Lady Mormont answered the call in a way that instantly endeared her to all. After proving herself to be the sultan of sass (“Lady Sansa is a Bolton — or is she a Lannister? I’ve heard conflicting reports”) and making it clear that she’s wise beyond her years, the precocious ruler did what countless others on “Thrones” have failed to do: saw the bigger picture.

READ MORE: Review: ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 6 Finale Unleashes Epic, Hardcore Vengeance

Winter is coming, she was told, as are the White Walkers, and so she put aside her differences and pledged all 62 of her men (who fight with the strength of 10 mainlanders, natch) to the cause. Think about that for a moment. How many others have failed (and usually died) because they couldn’t see the forest for the trees? More than one Stark, Stannis Baratheon, Oberyn Martell, even Jon himself. (He got better.) Lyanna listens to her maester when appropriate, sure. Crucially, though, she gives him the hand when Jon, Sansa and Davos put their cards on the table and decides what needs to be done all on her lonesome.

Bella Ramsey as Lyanna Mormont on Game of Thrones

That memorable introduction somehow paled in comparison to the stink eye she delivered to Ramsey Bolton ahead of the Battle of the Bastards (see above) and her rousing speech during last night’s finale, which deserves to be read in its entirety:

“Your son was butchered at the Red Wedding, Lord Manderly, but you refused the call. You swore allegiance to House Stark, Lord Glover, but in their hour of greatest need, you refused the call. And you, Lord Cerwyn, your father was skinned alive by Ramsay Bolton. Still you refused the call. But House Mormont remembers. The North remembers. We know no king but the King in the North, whose name is Stark. I don’t care if he’s a bastard. Ned Stark’s blood runs through his veins. He’s my king from this day until his last day.”

READ MORE: ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 6 Channeled George R.R. Martin Without Him, For Better and Worse

There’s also the fact that Ramsey has never acted before. If there’s any justice in this world — which, like Westeros, there usually isn’t — then she’ll be the biggest movie star in the world by the times “Thrones” returns next spring. Failing that, let’s hope her role is expanded. This show can be so monumentally upsetting that a genuinely inspiring presence is like a tonic. It’s also worrying, as the showrunners now know that Lady Mormont has attained fan-favorite status — as last night’s “The Winds of Winter” demonstrated more than any episode before it, they have a habit of eliminating all nonessential personnel.

That this character came about in the midst of a circus-like presidential election and one of the UK’s most significant political events in decades is a coincidence, but a happy one. The world needs a hero, and if that hero happens to be a fictional character on a high-fantasy TV show, so be it. The North remembers, and so will we.

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