A Daughter's Obedience, a Father's Game
Before she was a queen, Alicent was a pawn. We first meet the younger version of her (played by Emily Carey) as a dutiful daughter, sent by her father, Otto Hightower, to 'comfort' a grieving King Viserys. It’s a calculated, predatory move dressed up
as courtly obligation. From the very beginning, Alicent’s path is not her own. Her duty is to her father’s ambition. When Olivia Cooke takes over the role, the weight of those early decisions has settled deep into her bones. Cooke’s Alicent is a woman coiled with tension, her smiles tight, her posture rigid. She is performing the role of queen, wife, and mother, but the strain of the performance is etched onto her face. Her 'duty' is a gilded cage she was pushed into, and she has spent a decade convincing herself it was her choice to enter.
The Green Gown as a Declaration of War
There are characters who wield swords and characters who wield symbols. Alicent’s most famous weapon is a green dress. Her entrance at Rhaenyra’s wedding feast, clad in the color of the Hightower beacon for war, is a pivotal moment. It’s the first time she publicly aligns herself against the Targaryens and with her own house. But it’s more than just a power play; it’s an act of defiant self-preservation. After years of sublimating her own identity to serve the king and placate her friend-turned-rival Rhaenyra, this is Alicent drawing a line in the sand. Cooke’s performance in this scene is a masterclass in quiet fury. She isn’t shouting; she is simply being. The green gown is her armor, and her duty is now not just to her father or the king, but to the survival of her family’s claim. The trap is no longer just holding her; she is now actively reinforcing its walls.
Piety as a Shield for Fear
As the years pass, Alicent wraps herself in the cloak of piety, clutching the Seven-Pointed Star as a drowning woman clutches a piece of driftwood. Her rigid morality becomes the justification for her ever-hardening stance against Rhaenyra and her 'bastard' sons. But Cooke lets us see the fear beneath the faith. Every pious pronouncement is a desperate attempt to frame her political anxieties as righteous conviction. She is terrified for her own children, particularly her firstborn son Aegon, who stands as a direct threat to Rhaenyra’s succession. Her duty as a mother—a fierce, primal instinct—becomes twisted and weaponized by the political labyrinth she inhabits. Cooke’s Alicent doesn’t believe she is a villain. In her mind, she is the only one upholding the laws of gods and men in a court spiraling into chaos. She is doing her duty, even if it curdles her soul.
The Trap Finally Springs
The tragedy of Alicent Hightower culminates in a moment of devastating irony. After a lifetime spent dutifully serving King Viserys, she sits at his deathbed as he mutters deliriously about the 'Aegon' who was prophesied to unite the realm. He means the original conqueror, but Alicent, whose entire life has been oriented around her own son Aegon, hears what she needs to hear: a final, royal command. Her duty, in that one terrible moment of misinterpretation, is to place her son on the Iron Throne. It is the culmination of everything her father ever wanted and everything she has come to believe is necessary. Cooke’s expression in that scene is a harrowing mix of shock, grief, and a terrible, solemn resolve. The trap, which has been closing in slow motion for twenty years, finally snaps shut. In fulfilling what she believes to be her ultimate duty, she unleashes the very war she spent her life fearing.













