At the HBO FYC Panel, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms showrunner Ira Parker opened up about the creative decisions behind season 1, particularly the large flashback sequence in episode 5 that does not appear in George R.R. Martin’s novellas. In this sequence, we see a young Dunk and how he navigated through his early life to become a knight under his mentor, Ser Arlan of Pennytree.

Quick read:

  • Parker affirmed they had the freedom to expand beyond the novellas
  • Everything was discussed with George R.R. Martin
  • Dunk and Egg’s improv was one of his favourite unscripted scenes

Image: HBO

Staying true to the core story

When asked about the process of creating new material “out of whole cloth,” Parker explained his approach with George R.R. Martin:

“When I spoke to George, I said, no matter what, the story will be the story. The beginning will be the beginning, the middle, the middle, and the end, the end.”

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He emphasized that while the major plot points remain faithful to the source material, the team had freedom to expand and enhance the story.

Why they needed to add new content

Parker revealed that the original novellas provided only about half the material needed for a full six-episode season. This led the writers to expand characters and add new scenes from the very beginning of development.

“We had slowly started doing it from the very beginning, just pumping up certain characters, telling a little bit of a different story, filling out… even the Egg-Dunk relationship.”

The flashback and memorable improv moments

The big episode 5 flashback was part of this expansion strategy. Parker noted that one of his favorite additions was the scene where Dunk and Egg impersonate each other, which was largely improvised.

“That was some of the only improv that ended up making it into the cut. But it was so perfect and it tells you so much about people’s relationships without needing to work too hard and really feed the audience their vegetables.”

He explained that the flashback served the same purpose: delivering deeper character insight through extended storytelling while still drawing heavily from the spirit of the novellas. Overall, Parker and the team aimed to have “a little bit of fun” while respecting the core of Dunk and Egg’s story.

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