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Ira Parker shapes HBO's Game of Thrones spinoff with comedy-drama tone
Summary
Ira Parker, a Canadian showrunner and former House of the Dragon writer, adapted George R.R. Martin's Dunk and Egg novellas into HBO's A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, a six-episode series that blends comic and dramatic elements; the show premieres on Crave in Canada and a second season is already greenlit and in production.
Content
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms is HBO's television adaptation of George R.R. Martin's Tales of Dunk and Egg novellas and premieres in Canada on Crave. Ira Parker, a Canadian showrunner who worked on House of the Dragon, led the series and is in Belfast filming a greenlit second season. The first season runs six episodes, most of them about half an hour, and it blends comic moments with dramatic storytelling around Ser Duncan the Tall and his squire Egg. Parker has said the aim was to retain the novella's feel while expanding the world and characters for television.
Key details:
- The series is based on George R.R. Martin's Tales of Dunk and Egg novellas.
- The first season has six episodes, most running about half an hour.
- Peter Claffey plays Ser Duncan the Tall and Dexter Sol Ansell, now 11, plays Egg; Ansell was nine when the show was filmed.
- Ira Parker served in the writer's room for House of the Dragon and was the creator of the Canadian comedy-drama Four in the Morning; he also wrote for Better Things.
- A second season has been greenlit and Parker was interviewed from Belfast while that season was in production.
Summary:
The series presents a lighter, character-driven strand within the wider Westeros setting and was developed to reflect the tone of the original novellas while expanding supporting characters. The show debuts on Crave in Canada and a second season is already in production in Belfast.
