'Game of Thrones' Star Nikolaj Coster-Waldau on the Hilarious Prank Played on Kit Harington
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau said he also pranked creators by saying he cut his hair.
-- You've seen "Game of Thrones" star Nikolaj Coster-Waldau have sex with his on-screen sister, cripple a boy he pushed form a tower and earn the derogatory nickname "kingslayer."
But when he's not playing the complicated role of Jaime Lannister, Coster-Waldau says he and his "Game of Thrones" co-stars and staff are quite the pranksters behind the scenes.
"I had longer hair earlier on in the show, and there was constantly talk about, 'Should we cut it? Shouldn't we cut it? What's going to happen with the hair?'" Coster-Waldau told Peter Travers on ABC News' "Popcorn With Peter Travers."
"So I wrote [creators and writers Dan Weiss and David Benioff] this long letter where I pretended [to be] like a diva, saying, 'Listen guys, I just feel as an artist I'm being left out. And I need my own integrity. I have to take control of my character. Because Jaime is a soldier, I want him to have a buzz cut, so I'm going to go ahead and do that. And I hope you respect me as an artist that I have to do this. I'll send you a picture when it's done.'"
Coster-Waldau, 45, said he then waited until the next day and sent Weiss and Benioff a photo of him almost completely shaven from a 2009 TV show pilot he had done called "Virtual Reality."
"They didn't call me, but they called everyone else at HBO, to the top brass, and like freaking out completely. They had the hairstylist getting hold of wigs, because you can't just make a wig in like 24 hours," the Danish actor said.
"It was amazing. It was a beautiful moment. I got them. I got them really bad."
But Coster-Waldau said he now lives in constant anticipation of the time when Weiss and Benioff prank him back. The "Game of Thrones" writers once even pranked his co-star Kit Harington into believing he had to play character Jon Snow in the rest of the series with a prosthetic mouth piece of a permanent grin.
"This was season three. He got a script, and they said he was caught up in a fire. He survives, but all his lips are melted off, so from now on all he has is just this grin on his face. And Kit believed it," he recalled.
"He was like, 'OK, I'm going to have to make this work. I mean, it's all right. It's going to look weird, though.' And the makeup artist said, 'We're going to have to make this prosthetic. It's going to be quite big. It's going to take at least four hours to put on.' [Harrington said], 'Oh all right, OK. That's great.' But of course he walked on set, and they couldn't – they started laughing."
Now that "Game of Thrones" is in its sixth season, this is the longest Coster-Waldau has ever portrayed a character. But when he first told friends about getting the role of Jaime Lannister, they didn't think it would last long.
"When I got ["Game of Thrones"], I told friends, 'I'm doing this HBO show,' and they go, 'Wow, that's amazing. What's it about? Is it like gangsters? What is it?'" he recalled. "[I said], 'No, it's about dragons. It's about fantasy.' And people went, 'Oh, OK. Good luck with that.'"
It has been a challenging role for him to play, but Coster-Waldau said he welcomes all obstacles, such as having to act without his right arm after Jaime Lannister lost his.
"In the beginning, it was a pain in the butt. I had to sometimes hide my own arm in the backside and you had the stump in the front, which was the prosthetic," he explained.
"Now you have this gold hand, which is basically a golden metal glove that I put on, so it's not too bad."
Coster-Waldau said that now that the show has moved passed the book series written by George R. R. Martin, it's a level playing field for everyone.
"And I think reading the scripts for season six, I thought it was the strongest season of all of them," he said.
Watch the full interview with Nikolaj Coster-Waldau with Peter Travers on ABC News' "Popcorn With Peter Travers" above.