Showing posts with label downton abbey Christmas Day episode. Show all posts
Showing posts with label downton abbey Christmas Day episode. Show all posts

Friday, November 7, 2014

Downton Abbey spoilers: ****** ***** joins cast as Lady Mary's new love interest?

MIRROR
Nov 07, 2014 10:23 By Tufayel Ahmed



Downton Abbey’s Lady Mary is getting a new love interest - and he’s Goode, real Goode.

Watchmen and The Good Wife star Matthew Goode has reportedly signed up to play the widow’s latest suitor in the hit ITV period drama, reports the Daily Mail.

The actor was spotted filming scenes for the Christmas special and it's claimed he will also appear in several episodes of series six which begins filming in February.



A spokesperson for the show confirmed Goode will be in the Christmas special, telling Mirror TV: "Matthew Goode will appear in the Christmas episode as a guest character."

Goode, 36, is currently starring opposite Benedict Cumberbatch and Keira Knightley on the big screen in The Imitation Game.

Lady Mary - played by Michelle Dockery - has been fending off potential love matches over the last two series following the death of her husband Matthew Crawley.



READ MORE HERE: http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/downton-abbey-spoilers-matthew-goode-4584612

Monday, February 24, 2014

'Downton Abbey' Got Prince Edward Right

BLOOMBERG OPINION
By Stephen L. Carter  Feb 24, 2014 11:38 AM ET



Among the many subplots spinning in the “Downton Abbey” season finale, the one most interesting to the student of history involved a would-be blackmailer’s theft of a love letter written from the Prince of Wales to Freda Dudley Ward, and an amateurish scheme by Lord Grantham, a self-described monarchist, to steal it back.

Historical dramas are often at their shakiest when they introduce characters who actually existed, but “Downton Abbey” seems to have handled Prince Edward fairly. Edward’s notorious affair with Mrs. Winifred Dudley Ward produced hundreds, perhaps thousands, of bizarre letters, so it’s hardly beyond supposition that one might have wound up in the wrong hands. And the chances are that the letter would have been quite direct and inculpatory, for the future king was not one to express himself with cautious indirection.


He also would have sounded quite empty-headed.

For example, in a letter to Freda sold at auction in 2011, he sounded exactly like the eternal adolescent he was occasionally accused of being: “This is only just a teeny weeny little scrawl to catch the last post sweetheart & to tell you how fearfully madly I’m loving you this afternoon angel & looking forward to 4.30 tomorrow. Although I only said all this about 12 hrs ago I can't help saying it all again this afternoon only I mean it even more sweetheart!!”

In another letter, part of the manuscript collection at the State Library in New South Wales, the prince addressed her as “My vewy vewy [sic] own precious darling beloved little Freddie.”



Nobody but a royal could get away with such solemn silliness. In 2003, when Sotheby’s sold a batch of the letters, the New York Times described them as “written in childish pencil scrawls on yellowing sheets of notepaper emblazoned with the addresses of Nepalese base camps, Canadian locomotives and the royal retreat of Sandringham.” As to the substance, the Times was primly censorious: “Alternately self-pitying and condescending, speckled with misspellings and erratic punctuation, the letters reveal a man alarmingly spoiled, relentlessly misogynistic, caustically racist, and determined to avoid his ordained role in life at all costs.” And then there was this: “Especially astonishing to read are frantic avowals of undying love, rendered in a creepy combination of saccharine baby talk and pathological desperation.”

READ MORE HERE: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-02-24/-downton-abbey-got-prince-edward-right.html


Sunday, October 13, 2013

'When Downton calls, you jump!': Actress MyAnna Buring is on the fast track to fame



MAIL ON LINE
By KERRY POTTER
PUBLISHED: 18:01 EST, 12 October 2013 | UPDATED: 19:52 EST, 12 October 2013

Quirky Scandinavian prettiness, a Kylie-sized frame and pale blue eyes that flash with mischief – there’s something pixie-like about MyAnna Buring, star of Ripper Street and Downton Abbey. And it’s not just her looks that are impish. ‘OK, I should just admit it,’ she grins. ‘I follow Matthew Macfadyen around – I’m his stalker. I thought about it for years, wondering what was the best way to get close to him and decided to become an actor myself to try to work with him…’



She has played alongside Macfadyen three times: in 2010 Bafta-winning Channel 4 drama Any Human Heart; in BBC1’s Ripper Street, in which he plays a Victorian detective to her brothel owner; and in forthcoming comedy flick Epic, a yarn about a UK filmmaker attempting to make a movie in a fictional post-Soviet country he’s never heard of. ‘Matthew is such good fun – we’re always laughing. It’s nice to work with him a lot because you develop a rapport. Because it’s an intense working environment, it’s important to be surrounded by people who add to the enjoyment of the job.’



At 34, MyAnna (pronounced Mee-Anna, her first and middle names joined together) is thoroughly enjoying her job right now – and who could blame her? A big hit, Ripper Street is back for a second series. She had a role in last year’s Downton Abbey Christmas special, and her character has now been brought back for series four. She’s been part of an era-defining teen franchise, appearing as vampire Tanya Denali in the last two Twilight movies, but also has indie cred, playing the female lead in Ben Wheatley’s acclaimed British horror film Kill List. And you might also recognise her from recent TV shows including White Heat, Blackout and The Poison Tree… No prizes for guessing who hasn’t had time to go on holiday for three years.


‘I’ve just come out of an incredibly busy time,’ she says. ‘Work started to get really interesting when I hit 30. When people say, “Oh God, I’m 30”, I say, “What are you worrying about? It’s the BEST time.”’ Her joie de vivre comes through loud and clear; MyAnna is fantastic company, fizzing with energy and ideas. She speaks eloquently about her job, without – as many of her peers are prone to – making pompous pronouncements on her ‘craft’. And she may look like a wide-eyed ingĂ©nue, but she brims with a decidedly grown-up confidence that starts to make sense when she talks about her formative years.

She was born in Sweden to a surgeon father and an economist mother but spent her childhood in the Middle East, where her father worked. This meant travelling between continents from the age of five, so the nomadic, unpredictable life of an actor suits her well. ‘The idea of getting on a plane and going away for six months at a moment’s notice is very exciting.’ She credits her time in the Middle East with giving her a fresh perspective on life. ‘I learned to be less judgmental. I think when we grow up in the West, we have this idea that our way is the way, and it’s not – that point of view isn’t the only one you can have.’

Returning to Europe in her mid-teens, while her parents remained in Oman, she went to boarding school in Oxford and has lived in the UK since. She identifies herself as a Brit – when I dither between calling her a British actress or a Swedish one, she swiftly plumps for the former, saying, ‘Britain is where I’ve lived most of my life, where I’ve worked all my life, where my home is.’ And she certainly sounds entirely Home Counties (bar the occasional Scandinavian ‘for sure’).

It was at school in Oxford that she began pondering a career in front of the camera. ‘I was always a bit of a performing monkey and involved in putting on plays at school, but I had no idea how to go about being an actor. No one in my family did that. Drama school was an alien concept.’

Nevertheless, she went on to study drama at Bristol University, setting up a theatre company with classmates and taking their shows to Edinburgh in the summers, before applying to Lamda and winning a three-year scholarship. On graduating, she had bit-parts in TV shows such as Casualty before getting her break – a lead role in the well-received British horror movie The Descent, in which a group of young women go caving (what could possibly go wrong?).

MyAnna Buring

Now hitting her career stride, MyAnna can handle herself – and anything that her burgeoning celebrity throws at her – with aplomb. I note that, although she’s all over our screens, she manages to fly under the radar as a celebrity. ‘I don’t stumble out of clubs at two in the morning, snogging five people at once,’ she grins. ‘It’s a conscious thing.’ While filming the Twilight movies Breaking Dawn Parts 1 and 2 (playing the head of a coven of ‘vegetarian’ vampires), she observed the media hoopla around her co-stars Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson’s relationship. ‘I wouldn’t wish that invasion of privacy on anyone. It becomes hard to leave your hotel or house and you have to develop this incredibly thick skin,’ she says. ‘The heads of our banks and the people running our country – the people who make decisions that affect us all – deserve that kind of scrutiny. You don’t deserve it for being an actor.’


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/you/article-2454253/When-Downton-calls-jump--Actress-MyAnna-Buring-fame-fast-track.html#ixzz2hbbix6i1 
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Monday, June 24, 2013

Paul Giamatti to join Downton Abbey cast! (BBC NEWS)

Paul Giamatti

Oscar-nominated US actor Paul Giamatti is to join the cast of ITV's Downton Abbey, starting with the Christmas episode, it has been announced.

He will star alongside Elizabeth McGovern as Harold, the "maverick, playboy" brother of Lady Grantham.

Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and EastEnders actor Nigel Harman are also set to star in the fourth series of the drama

The stately series was the most-watched drama of 2012, averaging 11.9 million viewers per episode.



"We're excited that Paul Giamatti will be joining us on Downton to play Cora's brother Harold, the rather free-spirited uncle to Mary and Edith," said Gareth Neame, from production company Carnival Films.

"We can't wait to see him work alongside Shirley MacLaine, who are both sure to upset the Grantham's apple cart in this year's Christmas Day episode."

The influx of US actors to the period drama reflects its growing popularity in the States.

12.3 million Americans tuned in to finale of series three on 17 February, making it the highest-rated show of the day, and breaking the viewership record for broadcaster PBS