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“It sort of just felt like everything fell into place the way it was supposed to,” Dever says.Ramsey and Pascal spoke with The Associated Press about
Ramsey’s increased stunt work and lessons Pascal took away from this season. This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.RAMSEY: What I was most excited about, about going into Season 2, was getting to train and be strong. It’s nice to have a reason to exercise that isn’t just for your own personal health. I got so battered and bruised. The stunt team did everything they could to protect me, but I still somehow managed to get bruises every time. I think I commit a bit too much. It was a great time. I was absolutely exhausted the whole time but had a lot of fun doing it.Bella Ramsey, left, and Pedro Pascal arrive at the season two premiere of “The Last of Us” on Monday, March 24, 2025, at TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)
Bella Ramsey, left, and Pedro Pascal arrive at the season two premiere of “The Last of Us” on Monday, March 24, 2025, at TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)RAMSEY: Those moments happened quite frequently, not necessarily because of the actual stunt, but because you’d pile up months of exhaustion. And then there were days where I would wake up and be like, “I don’t know how I’m gonna do today.”
PASCAL: (laughs) You couldn’t get out of bed.
RAMSEY: Yeah, there’s times — I’ve never had this experience before — where I thought my body was just going to, like, cave in. It’s this feeling of like an instability in your body. I’m like, “I don’t know what’s going to happen.” So, I think there was so many times during shooting where I would feel proud at the end of the day, especially when it was a stunt day, with all of this exhaustion. In some of the later episodes, there’s quite a lot of physical work, and I just had no idea how I’d do it. And then you just do, like you kind of just do it and then pay the price.KNOWLES: Some of them can be detrimental, and I go into detail about that because I realize that a teacher telling me that Beyoncé was slow in kindergarten and that she needs to repeat the grade and it’s December — that woman could have messed up my child’s life. We wouldn’t even have a Beyoncé today if I had listened to her.
You gotta fight for your kids. I hope that lesson came through loud and clear. … That was important to me because I see a lot of parents that don’t, and my mom didn’t protect me.Tina Knowles-- entrepreneur, fashion designer, philanthropist and mother of Beyoncé and Solange-- has released a book, ‘Matriarch: A Memoir,’ and says being chosen for Oprah’s Book Club is “a great way to start it off.” (April 22)
KNOWLES: By the time I finished the book and I was ready to share it with them, both of them were on these really crazy schedules and I just didn’t want them to feel, “Oh, I got to stop and go read a book.” So, I sent them all of their parts and they approved the parts.KNOWLES: No. They were in agreement with everything.