Game Of Thrones: George R. R. Martin On How Hodor's Origin Story ...
Maybe your like
By Louisa Mellor | October 5, 2020 | - Share on Facebook (opens in a new tab)
- Share on Twitter (opens in a new tab)
- Share on Linkedin (opens in a new tab)
- Share on email (opens in a new tab)
Contains spoilers for Game of Thrones season six
Game of Thrones didn’t lack for torture. Over eight seasons of whippings, beatings, nipple-ectomy, castration, dragonfire-immolation, head-melting and death-by-hot-rat (Season two, Harrenhal. Nasty.) the show overdelivered on its pain quota. One act of torture though, was more painful to see than all the others combined. Partly because it was inadvertent, partly because it was psychological, and partly because it happened to one of the few citizens of Westeros with a pure, good heart: Hodor.
That wasn’t his given name. Born Wylis, the servant to House Stark only became ‘Hodor’ after suffering a life-changing seizure in his youth. That event damaged his brain and took away his power of speech, leaving him only able to say the one word that would become his name.
If anybody needs a refresher, in season six, episode five ‘The Door’, Hodor’s ward Bran Stark was using his new-found mystical ability to observe past events when their group came under attack by the army of the dead. Paraplegic Bran had inserted himself into a moment from Hodor’s past when he was urged to return to the present and take control of (or ‘warg’ into) Hodor’s body to help fend off the attack.
Ad
Ad – content continues below
In the confusion, Bran warged into young Wylis, accidentally forging a torturously painful psychic link between the stable boy and his adult self. When, in the present, Hodor was told to ‘Hold the door’ to allow Bran’s escape, Wylis heard the instruction in the past and a contraction of that phrase became the only word he was able to say. He’d psychically witnessed his own death as an adult and the trauma transformed him. Until he was torn apart by Wights, Hodor (played by Kristian Nairn) did hold the door, using his great heft to keep it closed and delay the army of the dead, sacrificing himself – just as Direwolf Summer had – until Bran could safely escape.
As reported in Vanity Fair, when the episode aired in May 2016, George R.R. Martin told the audience at a book event that in The Winds of Winter, the next instalment in GRRM’s A Song of Ice and Fire saga, Hodor’s origin story would play out differently.
Now, thanks to James Hibberd’s behind-the-scenes history of the HBO show Fire Cannot Kill a Dragon, we know what that slight difference is. In Chapter 23 of Hibberd’s book, Martin explains:
“I thought they executed it very well, but there are going to be differences in the book. They did it very physical – “hold the door” with Hodor’s strength. In the book, Hodor has stolen one of the old swords from the crypt. Bran has been warging into Hodor and practicing with his body, because Bran had been trained in swordplay. So telling Hodor to “hold the door” is more like “hold this pass” – defend it when enemies are coming – and Hodor is fighting and killing them. A little different, but same idea.”
Read more
Game of Thrones: George R.R. Martin Names His ‘Least Favorite Scene in the Entire Show’
TVGame of Thrones Showrunners Reveal Why Lady Stoneheart was Cut
In Hibberd’s expansive book, a detailed companion for any fan of the franchise, Martin also nominates Sibel Kekilli as Tyrion Lannister’s mistress Shae as the character whose screen incarnation was such an improvement on his book version that it made him wish he could go back in time and write her better.
Among countless other interesting details across the cast and creators, Martin also discusses a key difference between his version of character of Petyr Baelish, aka Littlefinger, and the character as he appears on screen, as played by Aiden Gillen. “My Littlefinger would never have turned Sansa over to Ramsay,” Martin tells Hibberd. “Never. He’s obsessed with her.”
Ad
Ad – content continues below
Fire Cannot Kill a Dragon: Game of Thrones and the Official Untold Story of an Epic Series is published by Bantum Press on Tuesday the 6th of October
Join our mailing list
Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox!
- Share:
- Share on Facebook (opens in a new tab)
- Share on Twitter (opens in a new tab)
- Share on Linkedin (opens in a new tab)
- Share on email (opens in a new tab)
Comment:
Comments count:0 Tags: A Song Of Ice And FireFantasyGame of ThronesGeorge R. R. Martin
Written by
Louisa Mellor
Louisa Mellor was the Den of Geek UK TV Editor from 2012-2025. She wrote about TV, film and books for Den of Geek from 2010, and…
Read more from Louisa MellorAd
More on A Song Of Ice And Fire
Game of Thrones Prequel Series House of the Dragon on Track for 2022, Casting Underway, Says HBO President
How Gone with the Wind Influenced Game of Thrones
HBO Max New Releases: October 2020
The Winds of Winter: George R.R. Martin Hopes Book is Finished by 2021
Ad - content continues below
Popular
New Video Game Releases 2025: Nintendo, PlayStation, Xbox, Steam, PC
New Movies 2025: Theatrical Releases, Streaming, Netflix, Prime Video, Horror, Sci-Fi
New TV Series for 2025: Netflix, Hulu, HBO, Max, FX, NBC, Disney+, Prime Video, Paramount+
New British TV Series for 2025: BBC, Netflix, ITV, Channel 4, Disney+, Prime Video, Sky
Read the latest issue
Ad
Tag » Why Does Hodor Say Hodor
-
Why Does Hodor Say Hodor? - Quora
-
In “Game Of Thrones,” Why Can Hodor Only Say “Hodor?” Why Is The ...
-
Why Hodor Only Says Hodor On Game Of Thrones | Cinemablend
-
Hodor | Game Of Thrones Wiki - Fandom
-
Game Of Thrones Season 6: The Truth About Hodor, Explained - Vox
-
Why Did Hodor Say Hodor?
-
Why Does Hodor Only Say 'Hodor' On 'Game Of Thrones'?
-
'Game Of Thrones' Recap: What Does 'Hodor' Mean? Now We Know
-
'Game Of Thrones': What Exactly Happened With Hodor And That ...
-
Why Does Game Of Thrones' Hodor Only Say "Hodor"? | Mind Read
-
Why Did Hodor Say Hodor? - EmojiCut
-
Why Did Hodor Only Say Hodor? - EmojiCut
-
Why Doesn't Hodor Speak? - Movies & TV Stack Exchange
-
Why Does Hodor Say Hodor?