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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Entertainment
Molly Pike

White House Farm viewers shocked at surprise Game Of Thrones reunion

White House Farm viewers were left distracted from all the drama during tonight's episode when a surprise Game Of Thrones reunion occured.

Gemma Whelan, who plays murderer Jeremy Bamber's cousin Ann Eaton and Alfie Allen, who stars as his friend Brett Collins, were back together on screen together tonight.

Bamber was locked up for shooting his adoptive parents, half sister and her twin boys in 1985 and handed a sentence of life without parole.

Alfie and Gemma previously played siblings Yara and Theon Greyjoy in the HBO fantasy series.

Their reunion sent viewers into meltdown, with one tweeting: "Seeing the Greyjoy siblings together again is slightly distracting."

Gemma Whelan, who plays murderer Jeremy Bamber's cousin Ann Eaton, in White House Farm (ITV)
Alfie Allen, who stars as Bamber's friend Brett Collins (ITV)

"I am loving the mini Game of Thrones reunion with the Greyjoys in White House Farm," another fan posted.

A third joked: "Expecting Lord Varys and Tyrion Lannister to pop up and sort them all out."

Another said: "@WhelanGemma is fantastic in #WhiteHouseFarm and a with #GameOfThrones #Greyjoy reunion."

Brett arrived from New Zealand in tonight's third episode of the ITV drama after hearing about the murders.

Gemma Whelan as Yara Greyjoy (Sky / HBO)

Tonight we saw Ann accuse Bamber of being the murderer, despite his sister Sheila being the main suspect.

The episode ended with the police releasing the family's bodies for burial, with Bamber planning to cremate them in a bid to destroy evidence.

Bamber has continued to protest his innocence over the years and attempted numerous appeals over his sentence.

Alfie Allen as Theon Greyjoy (©2017 Home Box Office, Inc. All)

He has slammed the show, calling it a "disgrace".

Speaking to the East Anglian Times from behind bars, he said: "It is being broadcast in the middle of a judicial review and is likely to interfere with the CPS being able to pursue the option of a retrial.

"It is promoted as 'a drama' as Carol Ann Lee's book that it's based upon is, for the most part, simply made up."

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