New 'Lord of the Rings' series brings a female story to the forefront
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[September 01, 2022]
By Danielle Broadway
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Morfydd Clark stars
in the new series "The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power" as
Galadriel, an Elven warrior who wishes to stop the evil returning to the
fantasy world of Middle-earth.
The series, one of the most expensive ever made, will arrive on
Amazon.com Inc's Prime Video on Friday, with new episodes based on the
appendices of the original J.R.R. Tolkien novels airing weekly.
Clark said her role as Galadriel gave her the opportunity to explore
stunts that show off the power of her character behind the backdrop of a
historically male-dominated society.
"Gender just isn't the same in Middle-earth in that I'm playing a
character who can physically take down any man around her," Clark said
during an interview. "It was really interesting to try to embody someone
with a huge amount of physical strength."
Co-executive producer Patrick McKay said Tolkien has had "some of the
greatest female characters in literature" and Galadriel was one of the
first characters the creators thought about for the new story.
"Imagining what her world was like and what she might have been
struggling with from clues throughout the text was really a joy," McKay
said.
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Actor Morfydd Clark arrives at the
global premiere of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power in
London, Britain, August 30, 2022. REUTERS/May James
Trystan Gravelle who plays Pharazon
shared the same sentiment and said he doesn't think there's anyone
more "badass on this Earth than a woman."
"To see that on screen, to see Morfydd take names and take numbers
like she does, is incredible," he said.
Among others, the show stars Robert Aramayo, Ismael Cruz Cordova,
Sophia Nomvete, and Nazanin Boniadi and is set during the Second Age
of Middle-earth, thousands of years prior to "The Hobbit" and "The
Lord of the Rings" films.
The series follows both new and seasoned characters as they face the
re-emergence of evil in Middle-earth and carve out legacies that
will last lifetimes.
(Reporting by Danielle Broadway; Editing by Lincoln Feast)
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