The alternative more credible theory is that she was terrified of Tywin and acted to save herself from execution. Shae is, after all, a fighter and acted in a way that was most likely to extend her own life. Tyrion had also recently hurt Shae when he tried to push her away, for her own sake. He called her a whore in an attempt to get her to leave Westeros.
Do you think that she really loved Tyrion, as Sibel says? Let us know! Amanda Michelle Steiner. Do you agree? Although throughout his marriage with Sansa, Tyrion assures that he has no romantic feelings for her whatsoever and even refuses to consummate their wedding she allows her jealousy to get the better of her, feeling envious over Sansa's highborn status and great beauty as Shae a common handmaiden and even worse, whore can not hope to have a relationship with a Lord.
Moreover when Tyrion could not leave King's Landing with her as he has to fulfil his duty as a Lannister she believes he enjoys his marriage with her and will forget her eventually. Tyrion preys on these insecurities later on by degrading her as a whore and treating their relationship as if it was another encounter and she leaves King's Landing in tears. When she did return to the city, her jealousy was replaced by bitterness and anger. With her suspicions over Tyrion and Sansa seemingly confirmed she incriminates the two of them further by saying they planned King Joffrey's assassination together and manipulating his words of love to antagonise and humiliate him during his trial.
She goes further by having an affair with his father, Tywin who has an equal amount of hatred for his son and outwardly attacks Tyrion when he finds her in his father's bedchambers either out of fear that he was there to kill her or initial anger.
She ends up being strangled with the chains that symbolised their love. The TV series changed Shae's back story which wasn't gone into in in great detail in the books, anyway as being from the Free Cities , because they enjoyed the audition of actress Sibel Kekilli, but wanted to have some explanation for why she speaks with a German accent. Kekilli confirmed in multiple interviews that she was glad that Shae's story diverged so much from her book counterpart, as it kept things fresh and kept people guessing.
Although Kekilli didn't have a major problem with Shae betraying Tyrion in the end, she was very displeased that the script called for Shae to implicate Sansa in the Purple Wedding. Kekilli was later spotted on location in Meereen during filming for the sixth season, leading to widespread speculation that she would appear, given that she appears in Tyrion's dreams in A Dance with Dragons.
She ultimately did not appear in the season, meaning that either she was visiting the set or her scenes were cut. In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, Shae is a camp-follower who attaches herself to a Lannister army and later comes into contact with Tyrion Lannister.
She is young and attractive, small and slender with large dark eyes, fine black hair, and with an interest in power. Unlike the TV series, Shae in the books is a lowborn Westerosi and not particularly subtle nor mysterious.
She claims that she ran away after her father tried to make her into his kitchen wench and molested her; she never claims that she worked as a handmaiden. She stands just over five feet tall and never wears undergarments.
She also has a keen sense of humor and shows a prodigious sexual appetite. When Varys said that he had to meet Tyrion's young lady. Shae says, "You're half right, I'm young. In the books, Tyrion arranges with Varys to set up Shae at a mansion hidden in the city.
Tyrion continues to meet Shae by visiting a high-end brothel, under the pretense of visiting a prostitute named Alayaya the madam's daughter who is learning how to read. Tyrion takes her to a room and she reads while he ducks out of the brothel, using a tunnel - which had been made for a previous Hand of the King whose sense of honor prevented him from entering the brothel openly - to a stable and then a horse to get to Shae's mansion.
Because Tyrion is insecure about his appearance and Shae's attraction to other men, Varys also helps get guards that are ugly or have no interest in women for Shae's manse these include a eunuch strangler and two hairy gay Ibbenese axemen. Tyrion discovers that a singer named Symon Silver Tongue has been visiting Shae.
Tyrion, fearing for Shae's life, warns Symon implicitly that he'd better not tell anyone about Shae. Symon is frightened, but not for long. Cersei later discovers Alayaya and has her guards Osney and Osfryd Kettleblack abduct her, mistakenly believing that she is the prostitute that Tyrion is having a relationship with.
Cersei threatens harm to Alayaya if anything happens to Joffrey during the Battle of the Blackwater while Tyrion has him manning the walls, or if Tommen is taken captive by their enemies. After the battle, Alayaya is stripped and publicly flogged at Tywin's order, and then sent naked out the front gate to walk home. The subplot with Alayaya was cut from the TV series, though Ros is substituted in as a different prostitute that Cersei mistakes as Tyrion's lover.
After the riots in the city due to Joffrey's tyrannical treatment of its inhabitants, Tyrion decides that the city has become too dangerous, and he must move Shae to the Red Keep for protection. To give her an excuse to be in the castle, he initially intends to arrange for her to work at the kitchens, but Varys convinces him it is a bad idea, for there she will be nonstop questioned and sexually harassed by the kitchen staff.
He suggests instead, and Tyrion agrees, to make her a handmaiden to Lollys Stokeworth. Shae knows that Lollys was gang-raped, but has no sympathy for her. Symon the singer attempts to blackmail Tyrion by threatening to tell Tywin or Cersei about Shae. Tyrion offers Symon thirty Gold Dragons to keep his mouth shut, but Symon brazenly tries to get more and more.
Finally, Tyrion loses his patience, and orders Bronn to kill Symon. Following Tyrion's marriage, he dismisses all Sansa's maids all of whom, as both Tyrion and Sansa are aware of, are Cersei's spies and hires Shae and a trustworthy woman named Brella, who formerly served Renly.
Sansa feels more comfortable in their presence. Shae does not care at all about Sansa, and has no loyalty to her. She does whatever Sansa tells her, but sometimes she gives Sansa very insolent looks. Sansa has no idea why, for she does not know Shae is her husband's lover. Hiring Shae as one of Sansa's maids gives Tyrion an excuse to be seen talking with her, but he does not delude himself that they are safe. Varys warns him that the false history he gave Shae could easily fool Lollys and her mother, but Cersei is more suspicious.
As before, Varys assists Tyrion by revealing to him secret passages at the Red Keep, which Tyrion uses for meeting Shae at abandoned rooms one of them is where dragon skulls are kept.
Varys even lets Tyrion use his own room for that purpose. Tyrion has qualms about endangering Shae's life; he considers sending her to Chataya's brothel, where she will live in safe and luxurious conditions, or marry her either to Bronn or Ser Tallad, who appears to be attracted to her. None of the show scenes between Shae and Sansa exist in the books though some, such as when Sansa panics upon menstruating for the first time, do occur but Shae is not involved.
Nor does Cersei speak directly to Shae during the siege of the city, though she does notice her and tells Sansa that with a highborn girl, the prospect of a ransom might offer some protection from rape, but a pretty thing like Lollys Stokeworth's maid would have a busy night. Shae does not care at all about Tyrion. He is well aware of that, and keeps chiding himself for not breaking up with her. If Tyrion had any doubts about Shae's true feelings, they were cleared by her nonchalant comment about his impending forced marriage to Sansa: "I don't care.
She's only a little girl. You'll give her a big belly and come back to me. It was not necessary at all to testify Shae in Tyrion's court trial , since its outcome was fixed from the beginning; the only purpose of her testimony was to humiliate Tyrion in public, and it definitely has. It had, however, unexpected applications for the short run and the long run: prior to that point, Tyrion considered positively the plea bargain his uncle offered him, but after hearing so many lies from the woman he loved - he exploded in rage and decided to go for trial by combat instead.
Thus, Shae's testimony triggered a chain of events that led to Tywin's death, and subsequently - the gradual decline of House Lannister, mainly due to Cersei's total incompetence as a ruler. She makes the mistake of calling him "my giant of Lannister", her pet name for him in the series it was "my lion" , which had drawn howls of laughter when she claimed at Tyrion's trial that he made her call him that.
Already brimming with rage and shock, this pushes Tyrion over the edge, and as she continues to beg for her life he strangles her in cold blood, using the Hand of the King's chain of office. While doing so, he recites the song " Hands of Gold. The TV version of the scene changes this around somewhat: as soon as Shae makes eye contact with Tyrion, she apparently realizes or fears that he will kill her for such a betrayal, and goes for a fruit-knife by the bedside to defend herself with.
Tyrion rushes to the bed and they struggle over the knife, Tyrion eventually overpowers her, and then proceeds to strangle her with a gold chain he gave her - continuing to strangle her to death long after she has stopped struggling. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novels. Initially introduced as a prostitute, Shae quickly became Tyrion's mistress after the two began a secret romantic relationship. In time, Shae served as Sansa Stark's handmaiden during her time in King's Landing, but her connection to Sansa only added to her paranoia when it came to trusting Tyrion.
At the start of Game of Thrones season 2, Tyrion snuck Shae into the Tower of the Hand so they could continue their relationship. To cover their tracks, Shae agreed to be Sansa's handmaiden, and the two women grew closer. Tywin caught wind of Tyrion and Shae's relationship, complicating matters by forcing his youngest son into a marriage with Sansa. Tyrion had no choice but to follow through with the arrangement, despite having no romantic feelings toward Sansa.
When Shae's life became increasingly threatened in season 4, Tyrion decided it was best to send the love of his life away. To successfully encourage her to leave, he labeled her a "whore" before ensuring that she boarded a ship to leave.
Shortly after Shae's departure, Tyrion was put on trial for the murder of his nephew, Joffrey Baratheon.
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