Does Jon Snow Win 'GOT?' Kit Harington Drops Potential Huge Hint
Fans will finally learn when "Game of Thrones" comes to an end in Season 8 just who will be successful and sitting on the Iron Throne. However, Kit Harington, who portrays Jon Snow on the series, may have just given the first big hint about his character's fate, and whether or not he'll be the one ruling the Seven Kingdoms when the wars with both the dead and Cersei Lannister come to an end.
With the exception of Cersei (Lena Headey), everyone else on the HBO series is currently focused on defeating the Night King and his Army of the Dead, meaning the battle for the Iron Throne has been temporarily paused. However, before the show ends, someone, living or dead, will need to successfully take the seat and claim it for their own, and they will need to eliminate their enemies and the rest of the competition along the way.
While he didn't admit if Jon Snow, a.k.a. Aegon Targaryen, would be the one to take the Iron Throne, Harington may have at least assured fans that his beloved character wouldn't die by the series' end, telling The Big Issue (via Express UK), that he was a "survivor."
"I'm a survivor. And there are only a few of us left who have made it all the way through. It is emotional. This has been an incredible part of my life," he said.
He also revealed what felt his character's final scene would entail, hinting it may not be a happy moment that involves him becoming the King of the Seven Kingdoms.
"My final scene will probably just be a close-up of my hand reaching out in front of a green screen," he joked. "But out of shot I'll be crying my eyes out."
Harington previously admitted that he now knows how the show will come to an end after finishing all of the script read-throughs for the final season. And while he obviously wouldn't share what he knew or how everything would end, he did admit that reading the final scripts for the show did make him emotional.
"We had a read through last week in fact, so I know everything now. I cried at the end. You have to remember that eight years of it—no one really cares about it more than us," he said at the time. "It's been an institution longer than any other institution I've been in. School, drama school, anything. U get a bit weepy thinking about it. It's going to be a strange year saying goodbye to everyone and having last scene with this person and that person. Not only you're so attached to it, loads of people around the world are attached to it."
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