plays the role of Joffrey Baratheon in the
television series.
Season 1 In Season 1 of
Game of Thrones, Joffrey Baratheon is introduced as the arrogant and cruel heir to the Iron Throne. He is initially presented as a charming prince, betrothed to Sansa Stark, but his true nature as a spoiled, sadistic bully quickly emerges. He torments Sansa, enjoys violence, and is ultimately responsible for the execution of Ned Stark, setting the stage for the War of the Five Kings. After Robert's death,
Cersei Lannister and her father
Tywin Lannister make Joffrey King, and his mother uses him as a puppet. He is also betrothed to
Sansa Stark to cement an alliance between the Houses of Stark and Lannister. A cruel tyrant, Joffrey makes sadistic torture and mass murder the main features of his kingdom, and even has Sansa's father
Ned executed for treason (which he declares he will never allow to go unpunished) over Sansa's pleas for mercy and Cersei's disapproval.
Season 2 Joffrey Baratheon, though only a boy, continues to rule as King of Westeros, wielding his power with cruelty and immaturity. He further solidifies his alliance with House Tyrell by setting aside his betrothal to Sansa Stark in favor of Margaery Tyrell. His reign is marked by his harsh treatment of Sansa, his dismissal of the respected Ser Barristan Selmy, and his overall sadistic behavior. Tyrion Lannister, as Hand of the King, must navigate Joffrey's volatile nature while managing the political complexities of the realm. Joffrey's tyranny worsens the situation with the Lannisters' war effort, as his uncle (and secretly, father)
Jaime (
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) is captured by the Starks, and Joffrey's "paternal uncles"
Renly (
Gethin Anthony) and
Stannis (
Stephen Dillane) challenge his claim to the
Iron Throne. Joffrey frequently orders his Kingsguard to beat Sansa. His cruelty and ignorance of the commoners' suffering makes him unpopular after he orders the City Watch to kill all of his "father"'s bastard children in King's Landing; consequently, he is almost killed during a riot. When Stannis attacks King's Landing, Joffrey serves only as a figurehead and avoids the heavy fighting. When the battle eventually turns in Stannis' favor, Cersei calls her son into the safety of the castle, damaging the morale of his army. The battle is only won by his uncle
Tyrion (
Peter Dinklage) and grandfather Tywin, aided by the forces of House Tyrell. To cement the alliance between those families, Joffrey's engagement to Sansa is annulled so he can marry
Margaery Tyrell (
Natalie Dormer).
Season 3 The marriage is yet to take place, and rifts are growing between Joffrey, and his uncle Tyrion and grandfather Tywin, who are (in their respective ways) rebutting his cruelty. Joffrey also seems to take little interest in his betrothed, but is amazed and altered by her ways of winning the people's favor, in which he takes part. At Tyrion and Sansa's wedding, he humiliates his uncle and is outraged when his uncle threatens him after Joffrey commands him to consummate the marriage. Tyrion only avoids punishment when his father Tywin assures Joffrey that Tyrion was drunk and had no intention of threatening the king. Later, after the events of the "Red Wedding", Joffrey gleefully plans on serving Sansa her recently deceased brother
Robb's (
Richard Madden) head. Tyrion and Tywin are outraged, and the former threatens Joffrey once again. After another disagreement, Tywin sends Joffrey to his room, much to Joffrey's chagrin.
Season 4 Joffrey finally marries Margaery. During his wedding feast, he repeatedly torments Tyrion and Sansa, presenting an offensive play about "The War of the Five Kings", with each of the kings played by dwarves to humiliate his uncle, whom he also forces to act as his cupbearer. The wedding feast turns into a dramatic spectacle of humiliation for Tyrion Lannister at the hands of Joffrey. The festivities conclude with Joffrey's shocking and sudden death by poisoning. His last act is an attempt to point at Tyrion, and as a result Tyrion is falsely accused and ordered arrested by Cersei, but it is later revealed that Lady
Olenna Tyrell and Lord
Petyr Baelish were the true perpetrators. Olenna, Margaery's grandmother, later confides to Margaery that she would never have let her marry "that beast". Following Joffrey's funeral, his younger brother and heir,
Tommen, is crowned King and proceeds to marry Margaery.
Development and reception In January 2007,
HBO secured the rights to adapt Martin's series for television.
Jack Gleeson was cast as Joffrey Baratheon. Gleeson received critical acclaim for his portrayal. In 2016,
Rolling Stone ranked the character #4 in their list of the "40 Greatest TV Villains of All Time". Author Martin described Joffrey as similar to "five or six people that I went to school with ... a classic bully ... incredibly spoiled". Gleeson would cite
Joaquin Phoenix's portrayal of
Commodus in
Gladiator as a big influence for his performance. ==References==