It seems Varys planted Shae with Tywin on purpose to enrage Tyrion, so that he would kill Tywin. And yes, Varys was planning on having Tywin killed at some point, and freeing Tyrion regardless of what Jaime did.
Tyrion killed Shae because she testified against him in court (for regicide, the worst crime you can commit) when she knew he was innocent.
However, Shae confirms that she is in love with Tyrion and that she cares deeply for Sansa as well and that, in spite of her pain at seeing them together and the danger she poses, Shae will not leave until or unless Tyrion asks her to.
In both the books and the show, Cersei Lannister has claimed to love her brother Jaime on multiple occasions. She remains devoted to him in multiple ways including only having his children.
In the books, Shae never loved Tyrion, and it was no secret. She didn't care about Tyrion, and stayed with him only for money and power. And he was well aware of that, and kept chiding himself for not breaking up with her. In the show, I would say yes, Shae is genuinely in love with Tyrion.
Shae was thought to have loved Tyrion Lannister in Game of Thrones until she betrayed him for his manipulative father, Tywin. ... Tyrion had no choice but to follow through with the arrangement, despite having no romantic feelings toward Sansa.
In exchange for her testimony Cersei offered her a manse in King's Landing and a knight to wed. Shae is in Lord Tywin's bed when Tyrion enters Tywin's chambers in the Tower of the Hand, after his escape from the black cells. He strangles her to death with his father's golden chain of office.
In season 2, Cersei Lannister captures Ros. Cersei mistakenly thinks that her brother Tyrion is secretly in love with Ros, because Ros wears a Lannister pendant. This mistake probably saved his real love, Shae, from Cersei. I read that Tyrion gave this pendant to Ros when they were still in Winterfell.
The real Reason: Petyr Baelish has uncovered that Ros was spying on him to Varys. ... Petyr Baelish has uncovered that Ros was spying on him to Varys. He then sends her (Ros) to Joffrey as a practice target, and to be his first murder.
No, there would be no point in having her kill Ros and not letting us know. Both characters are dead so if they showes us this in s8 it would have no meaning.
Joffrey uses Ros as a live target, brutally killing her by having her tied to his bed and shooting her multiple times with a crossbow, his first personal kill.
Joffrey's evil behaviours took root in (1) he was impotent; and (2) he was sexually aroused by inflicting pains of others. Isn't it curious that not once in the books or in the TV series Joffrey ever had sex? He was of age. Tommen was 5 years younger than him and had no problem consummating the marriage with Margaery.
“Sansa Stark, wed to Joffrey Baratheon, will bear him a son, the heir to the throne, and when the crunch comes she will choose her husband and child over her parents and siblings, a choice she will later bitterly rue.”
Petyr Baelish has uncovered that Ros was spying on him to Varys. He then sends her (Ros) to Joffrey as a practice target, and to be his first murder. ... Joffrey has killed Ros because she was his merciless defenseless practice target for his amusement.
At the conclusion of the dinner, however, Joffrey dies from poisoned wine. Tyrion is falsely accused and arrested by Cersei in A Storm of Swords (2000) but it is later revealed that Lady Olenna Tyrell and Lord Petyr Baelish were the true perpetrators.
His lie resulted in Micah (Sp?), the butcher's boy getting killed. He ordered Ser Mandon Moore to kill Tyrion in the Battle of Blackwater. Although this can arguably be attributed to Cersei, Septa Mordane and the rest of the Stark Men at King's Landing were killed when Joffrey took power.
In the final moments of season 3's "The Climb," Ros' lifeless body hangs from a bed pierced by several arrows. It could be considered the result of Joffrey climaxing after all those months of merely torturing Ros.
In reality, it was Olenna who had poisoned the wine. She had arranged with Littlefinger to end Joffrey's life and used Sansa Stark in the process. Littlefinger had worked with Dontos Hollard to deliver the poison, which was hidden in a stone attached to a necklace given to Tyrion's wife by Olenna.
After the wedding ceremony, Tyrion chooses not to consummate the marriage due to Sansa's lack of desire in him. It is not long before many in King's Landing come to know that the marriage was never consummated. Not long after Sansa's marriage, Joffrey and Margaery are wed and afterward a grand feast.
Lord Ramsay Bolton
Did Sansa ever have sex with Littlefinger? There is a scene after he kills her aunt where Sansa says that she knows what he wants, then the episode cuts to something else, leaving that hanging. No, she didn't.
Introduced in 1996's A Game of Thrones, Arya is the third child and younger daughter of Lord Eddard Stark and his wife Lady Catelyn Stark....
The season ended with her lover/nephew Jon Snow, the rightful heir to the Targaryen crown, stabbing her to death in the Iron Throne room to prevent her from further acts of destruction.
Jon Snow's death was inevitable, but so was his resurrection. ... Snow was killed at the end of season 5, after his ideas about what to do with the Wildlings and his stories about the White Walkers drove the rest of the Night's Watch past their breaking point.
Jon Snow's story on "Game of Thrones" concluded with him back in the true North. The only living descendant of both House Stark and House Targaryen, Jon Snow left the Seven Kingdoms behind and went back beyond the Wall to live out his days with the Free Folk and his direwolf, Ghost.
Jaqen tells Arya she must give up the Stark name to truly become “no one,” like him. ... That is her character's death: Arya is gone, in place of a nameless girl. But in Season Seven, Arya is reborn. After killing her rival The Waif, Arya comes face-to-face with a proud Jaqen.