15 Aug, 2022
(edited)Edited by Trotter on 2022-8-15 1:29:18 PM UTC
Edited by Trotter on 2022-8-15 1:31:29 PM UTC
Edited by Trotter on 2022-8-15 1:32:06 PM UTC
2022-8-15 12:07:56 PM UTC
15 Aug, 2022
2022-8-15 2:37:12 PM UTC
Fans have spent months speculating when and how he might appear in the show. They’ve combed the various trailers and publicity shots. Some theorize that fans have already seen his image—or at least his Annatar guise. But executive producer Lindsey Weber told TIME the prevailing fan theories may be on the wrong track.
When The Rings of Power dropped a new trailer at San Diego Comic-Con in July, fans found a leading contender for Sauron: A new, mysterious character with villainous vibes and a close-cropped, bleach blonde haircut that fans on Twitter hastened to point out was reminiscent of Eminem’s iconic look.
Fans quickly decided that this character was being played by actor Anson Boon. They’re wrong on that count.
While reporting my recent cover story for TIME about The Rings of Power, Weber exclusively shared that the actor in that trailer had been misidentified. The mysterious person is played by Bridie Sisson, who previously starred in Netflix’s Cowboy Bebop. And while Weber would not confirm the name of Sisson’s character, she did offer a tantalizing hint about her origins.
“We are enjoying all the speculation online and can tell you Bridie Sisson is an incredible actor,” Weber said. “We also thought fans might like to know that her character is traveling from far to the east—from the lands of Rhûn…”
https://time.com/6205023/sauron-the-rings-of-power-identity/
15 Aug, 2022
2022-8-15 5:16:37 PM UTC
The Rings of Power, which debuts Sept. 2 on Prime Video, is already the most expensive show ever created. The showrunners, J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay, have planned 50 hours of television, broken up over five seasons, and the story is sprawling. They pulled from Tolkien’s appendices, notes the author left at the end of The Return of the King about the events of the Second Age, thousands of years before heroes like Aragorn or Frodo were born.
If you want to watch the series without knowing anything about what might happen in the show, know that this story contains minor spoilers. Stop reading now. But if you want some background on the series and how Payne and McKay cooked up a story from Tolkien’s notes, forge ahead. I’ve seen two episodes of the show, and the information in this story comes primarily from the appendices.
The showrunners spoke extensively with the Tolkien estate
In particular, the creators consulted with J.R.R. Tolkien’s grandson, Simon Tolkien. “Meeting him was the experience of a lifetime,” says Payne. They stayed in touch with the Tolkien family and other members of the estate. “At key moments they would weigh in, and we would write letters back and forth and communicate and make sure we were doing something all of us could agree on to move forward with the story.”
https://time.com/6205593/the-rings-of-power-secrets-cast-creators/