Showing posts with label lady sybil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lady sybil. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Downton Abbey Spoilers – Guess who dies this series & Dame Maggie Smith tells Emma Watson to “get a grip”

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June 22nd, 2014 by Anna Howell.

 

Well this is certainly good news for fans of Downton Abbey – Bosses at the ITV show have declared that they will stop killing off major characters!

Of course in any TV series, especially dramas, you expect to witness a little heartache and loss, but what you don’t expect is two major characters being killed off in ridiculously similar circumstances within weeks of each other!



But, this is precisely what happened in Downton Abbey during its third series when Lady Sybil, the youngest daughter of the Earl and lady Grantham, died shortly after giving birth to her daughter.



The death was certainly unexpected and sent shock waves through the nation, so imagine our surprise when during the Christmas Day Special that very same year her brother in law Matthew Crawley was killed in a car accident on his way home from visiting his wife and new-born son in the hospital.



Of course the second death was out of the writers hands as Dan Stevens, the actor who played Matthew had decided to quit the role after his initial contract was up for renewal.


(oops, wrong lover)



Death was the only option given Matthew’s place and standing in the great estate, 
which lead us to start panicking about more deaths, should more actors wish to leave.

But fear not as the powers that be have said that, so as not to risk losing viewers, they have put a ban on major character deaths in the future, so Lesley Nicol has revealed to The Daily Star newspaper!



Speaking of Dame Maggie Smith it would seem that she might have picked up a few of her character’s tough love habits as Emma Watson has revealed that she was told to “get a grip” by the legendary star.

emma watson animated GIF

According to Watson, who starred with her in all of the Harry Potter movies, it was Dame Maggie who helped her get over her fear of watching herself on screen, as she has been explaining in a recent interview with Hello magazine. Emma recalled that she told Dame Maggie that she didn’t know whether she could watch any of the scenes back, to which Maggie told her to “get a grip”.




Thursday, January 16, 2014

"Downton Abbey" alum Jessica Brown Findlay, John Hurt and Sebastian Stan star: The CW Acquires 'Labyrinth' Miniseries

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
1:45 PM PST 1/15/2014 by Philiana Ng


The CW Sets Midseason Schedule, Moves Two Series to New Nights

The network has acquired the four-hour period mini Labyrinth, starring Downton Abbey alum Jessica Brown Findlay, The CW announced Wednesday afternoon during a panel at the Television Critics Association winter press tour.

Veteran actor John Hurt; Sebastian Stan, who returns to The CW (he recurred on Gossip Girl); and Tom Felton also star in the mini. Janet Suzman, Claudia Gerini, Katie McGrath, Emun Elliott and Tony Curran also co-star. A premiere date will be announced later.


Labyrinth, based on the novel by Kate Mosse, will shift back and forth between medieval and modern-day France. The mini centers on two women separated by centuries who are united by the search for the Holy Grail.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/cw-acquires-labyrinth-miniseries-671291






Sunday, July 14, 2013

Downton Abbey: Newcomer Daisy Lewis (SPOILERS)

Haunting: Daisy with Sybil pout

This beauty will be going all pout to set tongues wagging at Downton Abbey.

Actress Daisy Lewis is being brought in to heal the broken heart of widower Tom Branson in the new autumn series on ITV.

And those haunting lips and sultry looks seem bound to remind him of wife Lady Sybil Crawley who died in childbirth in the last series.

Newcomer Daisy, 28, who has starred in Doctor Who, will play the live-in governess of Tom’s daughter, also called Sybil in memory of her tragic mum, played by Jessica Brown Findlay.

She will quickly strike up a ­romance with the handsome Irishman, the family’s former chauffeur, played by Allen Leech.

A source said: “Daisy will become one of Downton’s most prominent characters. She wowed producers in her audition and they are delighted to have secured such a brilliant young actress.

“Her romance with Tom will be one of the main storylines of the series. He will begin to develop feelings for her and they start a secret affair.




"Tom will have an even bigger role in the new series after ­becoming the estate manager of Downton.

"The writers know he is a very popular ­character and the ­viewers were gripped by Lady Sybil’s traumatic death.

“In the Christmas special one of the new maids tried to kiss Tom although, at the time, he wasn’t quite ready to move on.

“But viewers will see that’s all going to change in the new series.”


http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/downton-abbey-newcomer-daisy-lewis-2051319
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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Jessica Brown Findlay shocked by onslaught of grief after Lady Sybil died in Downton Abbey (LONDON EVENING STANDARD)



The death of Lady Sybil in Downton Abbey left actress Jessica Brown Findlay facing an "onslaught" of grief from devastated friends, she revealed.

Jessica, 23, admits she wasn't prepared for the outpouring after her character died from eclampsia during childbirth in the last series.

Speaking to HuffPostUK, Jessica said: "The day Sybil died I was flying out to film in New York. Normally when you land somewhere, you get a couple of messages, but I had an onslaught from people saying, 'You could have warned me.'

"Even my parents knew I was dying, but they didn't know how, so my mum was in bits. My dad had to tell her, 'You can call her on the phone.' "

Despite being part of the successful show, Jessica was "desperate" to hang up her corset in favour of exploring other roles.

READ MORE: http://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/jessica-brown-findlay-shocked-by-onslaught-of-grief-after-lady-sybil-died-in-downton-abbey-8557766.html

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

'Downton Abbey' breaks our hearts and shows our world being born (LA TIMES)


By David Horsey
February 19, 2013, 12:01 a.m.


Another season of "Downton Abbey" has swiftly gone by, and those of us who are fans deserve a break.

The tragic death of one character -- Lady Sybil -- was hard enough to take, but when the final episode concluded with the upright Matthew Crawley dying in a car wreck reminiscent of the opening scene in "Lawrence of Arabia," it was simply too much manipulation of our tender heartstrings. We need some time to grieve while the writers concoct new twists in a storyline that had tied up most of the loose ends at the close of Season 3.

I confess I'll not miss Matthew all that much. After he got through the curious torture of deciding whether to accept a fortune from the will of his dead fiancee’s father (was there ever any doubt that he’d take the money and save Downton?), he became a rather bland presence in the crowded cast.

I loved his vintage sports cars but was put off by his weak English chin (too much like my own, I suppose). His prickly, complicated wife, Mary, is the character viewers of the show hate or love (I think she’s terrific), and she was getting a bit too domesticated by being married to him. Now, she’ll be free to let her sharp edges poke through in a new plotline for the next season.

READ MORE: http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/topoftheticket/la-na-tt-downtown-abbey-20130219,0,6714589.story

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Downton Abbey: Five Things You Must Know Before Sunday's 'Downton Abbey' Finale By Justine Ashley Costanza. Posted on Feb 15th 2013. (CELEB LOVE)


Consider yourself warned: The season ends with an unexpected bang.


Season 3 of Downton Abbey saw the marital union of Lady Mary and cousin Matthew, the near end and recovery of Lord Grantham’s estate, and the shocking death of Lady Sybil.

If the finale is anything like the rest of the episodes that aired this season, it’s sure to rouse a few laughs, gasps, and even tears. So arm yourself with tissues and these five teasers about Sunday’s Christmas Special, “A Journey to the Highlands.”


1. Spoiler Alert: After the shocking finale aired in the U.K. last December, the episode received extensive media coverage. With all of those ruin-the-surprise articles floating around, avoid searching online for "Downton Abbey finale" like the plague.

2.  A Little R&R: We’ve witnessed the Crawleys endure a series of setbacks and heartbreaks this year but rest assured, the family enjoys a much needed vacation during a trip to Duneagle Castle in Scotland.

3. Timeline Shift: In the promotional clips released by PBS, we see an older baby Sybil being held by Mr. Carson, so it’s clear the episode occurs sometime after episode 6.

READ MORE: http://www.yourtango.com/2013174371/five-things-you-must-know-sundays-downton-abbey-finale

Friday, February 1, 2013

'Downton Abbey' Season 3 Spoilers: Moving Forward After Lady Sybil's Death By Bobby Pollier, EnStarz | Jan 31, 2013 10:53 AM EST



"Downton Abbey" continues to flourish in the U.S., but although many fans remain loyal to the British-American drama, there are several who aren't too thrilled with the recent death of Lady Sybil.

While losing characters in a show will always be a mixed bag in terms of fan response, executive producer Gareth Neame told People that he sees the situation of Sybil's death when giving birth to her child as an opportunity for the series to go in a new and exciting direction.


"These exits can be good opportunities for the drama because they allow you to take the story in a different direction and change things in a way you hadn't quite thought of," he said. "It can be seen as a blow to lose characters, it can very often be as much an opportunity as it is a loss."

"Downton" creator Julian Fellowes said the public is smart enough to realize "that when Sybil dies or when [another character, whose identity is being concealed] dies, it is because the actor wanted to leave" the series - rather than a character dying just for the sake of the plot.

Read more at http://www.enstarz.com/articles/12485/20130131/downton-abbey-season-3-spoilers-moving-forward-after-lady-sybils-death.htm#DlcV61xRw0FSb4xX.99 




Tuesday, January 29, 2013

On Death and Loss: Lessons from Downton Abbey Posted: 01/29/2013 10:20 am (HUFF POST)

Elisabeth Joy LaMotte, LICSW
Psychotherapist; Author, 'Overcoming Your Parents’ Divorce: 5 Steps to a Happy Relationship'



Once again, this week's episode of Downton Abbey is full of powerful insights about life, love and human nature. When 24 year old Lady Sybil's delivery of her first child takes a heartbreaking twist, viewers witness a telling exploration of grief and loss. Death is such a painful and taboo topic, and Sunday night's episode demonstrates the extent to which people tend to grieve differently and to process the death of a loved on in varied ways.

With the shocking death of Lady Sybil (Lady and Lord Grantham's youngest child) the upstairs and the downstairs of Dowton Abbey are paralyzed in a grief-stricken state of shock. Thomas the footman, Downton's purest villain who in three seasons of the show has yet to say or do anything remotely genuine or kind, sheds tears in a corner and sobs, "In my life... not many have been kind to me, and [Lady Sybil] was one of the few."


During Lady Sybil's final moments, her Irish husband and her American mother cling to her side and proclaim their profound love, while her British sisters, father and brother-in-law keep their distance and stare at her, jaws dropped, as if trapped in a mutual state of disbelief.

Immediately following her death, Sybil's brother in law, Matthew, inappropriately attempts to distract himself with business and financial matters. Meanwhile, the adoring chef, Mrs. Patmore, speaks lovingly of her memories:

"She wasn't much more than a baby herself poor love. When I think how I taught her to cook. She couldn't boil and egg...yet she was so eager."

READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/elisabeth-joy-lamotte-licsw/downton-abbey-death_b_2570899.html

Monday, January 28, 2013

Live Chat: Allen Leech (Downton Abbey's Branson) (MASTERPIECE)




Join actor Allen Leech (Rome, From Time to Time), Tom Branson in Downton Abbey, for a live, online chat on Monday, January 28, 2013 at 1pm, Eastern time. Leech will discuss the former chauffeur’s tumultuous return to Downton Abbey in Season 3, life upstairs, and Sybil.

Set a reminder by entering your email below.  And sign up for the MASTERPIECE e-newsletter (on the right column of this page) to get advance notice of future chats.

Note: Online chats are subject to last minute change or cancellation when circumstances warrant.

READ MORE: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/programs/features/live-chat/allen-leech-branson

'Downton Abbey' Season 3 Recap: Unbearable Tragedy Strikes Posted by Adriana Velez on January 27, 2013 at 10:36 PM (THE STIR)



To quote the Dowager Countess, "Nothing is as bad as this." It was her most memorable line of the episode. But this line was uttered out of agony, and I'd take a million of her barbs over that. Did you ever think you would see Violet crumple in tears? That was one of the most heartbreaking moments in this episode.

If you haven't seen this one yet, stop right here. MAJOR SPOILER ALERT. Oh my God, this episode was almost too much. So horribly tragic -- and so infuriating.

***WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD***

You saw this coming with Sybil, right? From the moment Sir Philip arrives on the scene, with his title and all that toff brotherhood between him and Grantham. Sybil was pretty much sacrificed on the altar of England's dysfunctional class system. Sir Philip breezes in, and Grantham immediately prefers him over the family physician, Dr. Clarkson. Oh sure, Clarckson's been wrong before -- but he knows his patients, and his vision isn't clouded with smug arrogance.

Grantham and Sir Philip are infuriating. But the misery over Sybil's  death by eclampsia shortly after the birth of her daughter runs even deeper for the family. And what a horrible death it was -- from the scary labor down to the convulsions at the end. The kindest, most loving person in the Crawley family had an unjustly wretched end.

READ MORE; http://thestir.cafemom.com/entertainment/150209/downton_abbey_season_3_recap

Sunday, January 27, 2013

'Downton Abbey' Recap: 'Like Too Many Women Before Her' The women - and men - of Downton pay the price for the patriarchy (ROLLING STONE)


By Sean T. Collins
January 27, 2013 10:05 PM ET


The thing about comfort food is that when someone serves you a piping hot plate of it week after week, you never suspect that one day they're going to grab it and smash it into your face.

Downton Abbey is just a soap opera, as both its admirers and detractors will tell you; what side of that divide they come down on depends on both how they feel about the genre itself and this show's impeccable version thereof. And while people die on soaps all the time, those deaths are typically tearjerkers, not gut-punchers. That's certainly been the case on Downton until this point, where the major deaths – Kemal Pamuk, Cora Bates, William, Lavinia, even the Crawley heirs whose deaths on the Titanic started it all – have meant more to us in terms of how they've affected the survivors than the dyers themselves.


So I'll admit it: Despite the ominous rumblings from across the pond, where this season aired months ago, I never saw this coming. Not when Dr. Clarkson mentioned his concerns about pre-eclampsia. Not when the family really started to fight about which doctor was in the right. Not when the childbirth seemingly went off without a hitch. Not when Sybil was issuing ominously final-sounding instructions about how her family should be treated. Not even when the panic-stricken family gathered in Sybil's room, watching her scream and pound her own head and seize and convulse and gasp for breath. Surely, surely, something could be done. That's the kind of show this is, right?


Wrong. And in proving it wrong, creator/writer/showrunner Julian Fellowes and actress Jessica Brown Findlay delivered more than just one of the most physically unbearable-to-watch death scenes this side of Breaking Bad or Deadwood – they served up the show's most powerful broadside against its own sexist system yet.


Every woman I know who's experienced pregnancy and childbirth has at least one jaw-dropping story of creepy or condescending or infuriating paternalism by some male medical professional or other. Well before you get into the well-documented War on Women territory of moving to convict rape victims who abort their pregnancies of felony evidence tampering, women's physical and psychological pain during this process is too often treated like an inconvenience to be brushed aside or powered through rather than treated with all due hippocratically mandated urgency. If those needs are not taken seriously, neither is the gender that generates them.

In tonight's episode, that paternalism becomes tragically literal. That tragedy is foreshadowed when an ebullient Lady Edith learns she's been offered a gig as a newspaper columnist, with a carte-blanche remit that would make a 21st-century freelancer of any gender flip the eff out. (Ahem.) Without even realizing how condescending he's being, Robert reacts as though the editor only made the offer to draught off the great Earl of Grantham's family name. When he looks at his daughter he sees neither her talent nor her need for support, only a weaker-sex reflection of himself. And among his peer group, he's a relatively open-minded guy! Downton Season Three's laser-precise exploitation of Lord Robert's weaknesses has been kind of remarkable to behold.

Enter the odiously arrogant doctor Sir Phillip, and the mistake that costs Sybil her life. Confronted with a difference in opinion among two male medical professionals – one of whom has known Sybil not just as a patient but as a person (and even a staff member, during the War) since birth and therefore reacts to her uncharacteristic appearance and behavior with alarm, the other who'd never even met her until the day before and therefore blows it off – Robert and Cora split on what should be done. Naturally, the default decision is to do what her father prefers: nothing. The delay costs them precious time, preventing them from taking the question to Sybil's husband Tom to make the final call; by this point Sybil herself is too incoherent to make the decision herself. Father knew best, until he didn't.


Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/news/downton-abbey-recap-like-too-many-women-before-her-20130127#ixzz2JEqTnmup 
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Michelle Dockery devastated by Lady Sybil death Source: Bang Showbiz



Michelle Dockery was "devastated" while filming Lady Sybil's death in 'Downton Abbey'.

The 30-year-old actress ・who portrays Lady Mary in the ITV1 period drama ・ and Laura Carmichael, who plays Lady Edith, were disappointed when Jessica Brown Findlay's alter-ego was killed off, and the brunette beauty really misses her "distinctive" laugh. She said: "We knew a couple of weeks prior to filming the episode what was going happen to it felt like this huge build up. One of the last scenes we shot with Jessica was where the sisters say goodbye to her, and me and Laura Carmichael [Lady Edith] were just devastated playing it.

"We've spent three years of our lives together so Jessica going was as wrench. I miss her laugh, it's really distinctive."

While Michelle was distraught filming Sybil's death, she puts her full trust in 'Downton Abbey' co-creator Julian Fellowes and is "excited" to see what is going to happen to each character in the show.

READ MORE: http://www.list.co.uk/article/46721-michelle-dockery-devastated-by-lady-sybil-death/

'Downton Abbey' Star Allen Leech On Lady Sybil's Death, The Christmas Special And Series 4 Posted: 24/12/2012 09:04 GMT | Updated: 24/12/2012 09:04 GMT (HUFFINGTON POST)



"Nothing is really as it seems," says 'Downton Abbey's' Allen Leech.

By the look of the show's Christmas special trailer, his character Tom Branson is about to embark on a love affair with the new maid Edna, after he's seen smooching her with his top off.

But the Irish actor is unaware that the scene is in the preview, and adds: "It would explain all those vicious tweets I've been getting recently."

After first appearing in the hit ITV period-drama as a chauffeur, Leech's outspoken character Branson has risen up the social ranks after marrying Lord Grantham's daughter Sybil, earning a legion of fans along the way.


Unfortunately, they weren't all so happy with how his character reacted when his beautiful wife died during labour...


"The abuse I got on Twitter after episode five was crazy, people care about the character so much... they asked 'Branson, why didn't you do more to save her?'

"I'm actually just an actor. I find it very dear that people care so much about her."

Sybil's death was one of the saddest scenes on TV this year. The baby - which promised to unite the fractured family once again - was on its way, but complications over the birth ignited a clash between old - the traditional administrations of purse-lipped surgeon Sir Philip (Tim Piggott-Smith) - and the new-fangled ways of Doctor Clarkson (David Robb).


READ MORE: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/12/18/downton-abbey-star-allen-leech_n_2321259.html

'Downton Abbey' Season 3 episode 4: Lady Sybil's baby arrives, get out the hankies By Andrea Reiher January 27, 2013 10:00 PM ET (ZAP 2 IT)



This might just be the finest episode "Downton Abbey" has ever done. It is certainly a masterclass in acting from everyone involved. Be warned: Don't keep reading if you haven't watched yet.

Lady Sybil has died in childbirth. What an absolutely gut-wrenching hour of television. When Sybil goes into labor, there are some issues and Dr. Clarkson wants to move her to the hospital. But Lord Grantham's stuffy specialist Sir Phillip says everything is perfectly normal.

And a healthy baby girl arrives. But Sybil goes into seizures in the middle of the night and dies, with her family surrounding her, begging the doctors to do something. By that point it's too late.


Kudos to Elizabeth McGovern and Allen Leech as Cora and Tom. Their acting in Sybil's death scene was rip-your-heart-out good. This episode could really be anyone's Emmy reel, though -- from the Crawleys to the staff to Lady Violet. Maggie Smith's small moment at the end with Carson and then the hitch in her walk said more than 1000 words could express.


It was also a nice showing for Anna and Thomas, both of whom were closer to Lady Sybil than the other staff. Really just stellar work all around.

READ MORE: http://blog.zap2it.com/frominsidethebox/2013/01/downton-abbey-season-3-episode-4-lady-sybils-baby-arrives-get-out-the-hankies.html

Monday, September 10, 2012

Downton Abbey: Lady Sybil (Jessica Brown Findlay) wears a baby bump in the show! (THE SUN)


DOWNTON ABBEY beauty Jessica Brown Findlay said wearing a prosthetic baby bump for the hit show “terrified” her.

Her character in the ITV1 drama, Lady Sybil is expecting her first child with her new husband, former chauffeur Tom Branson (Allen Leech).

Jessica said: “My bump didn’t make me broody – it made me terrified!

“Everyone was very touchy-feely which was weird – it’s not real!

READ MORE: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/showbiz/tv/4529535/Downton-Abbey-star-Jess-Brown-Findlay-was-terrified-of-her-fake-baby-bump.html

Friday, July 27, 2012

Michelle Dockery nearly spills out of her corset in sexy Love magazine shoot By DAILY MAIL REPORTER PUBLISHED: 18:48 EST, 26 July 2012 | UPDATED: 01:37 EST, 27 July 2012 (MAIL ON LINE)



A whole new costume drama: Michelle Dockery poses in a corset and flowers in her hair for the new issue of LOVE magazine



As Lady Mary Crawley in Downton Abbey, Michelle Dockery is used to wearing a corset.

But its unlikely we'll see the eldest Crawley daughter wearing this get-up in the hallowed halls of Downton Abbey any time soon.

The actress, 30, looked like she was about to spill out of her corset in a Gothic-themed shoot for the new issue of LOVE magazine.


Not so plain now: Laura Carmichael, who plays Lady Edith, wears a striking gown as she reclines on a sofa


In the accompanying interview, she said had become very fond of Lady Mary over the past two series and the upcoming third.

She told the mag: 'Like all characters that you play you feel very protective of them. I’m very fond of Lady Mary. I care about her very much. Of course I want her to find happiness.

‘The tension between Edith and Mary I don’t really get because my sisters were not vicious to each other like they’ve been. But it was always really fun to play.'



Ethereal : Jessica Brown Findlay looks a fairy bride in the Gothic shoot


Michelle joined her on-screen sisters Jessica Brown Findlay and Laura Carmichael – who play Sybil, and Edith in the ITV drama – underwent the gothic-inspired transformation for a photo shoot with fashion bible LOVE.

Styled by the magazine’s editor-in-chief Katie Grand, it sees Lady Sybil don a plunging corset, with flowers in her messy hair.

Read more:  http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2179589/Downton-Abbey-Michelle-Dockery-nearly-spills-corset-sexy-magazine-shoot.html?ito=feeds-newsxml



Sunday, May 6, 2012

'Game of Thrones' star Rose Leslie: 'I'm open to Downton Abbey return' Published Friday, May 4 2012, 11:14am EDT | By Justin Harp (DIGITAL SPY)



Rose Leslie has said that she is open to returning to Downton Abbey.

The actress starred in the first series of Downton Abbey as Gwen, who Lady Sybil helped to advance from a housemaid to a secretary.


In an interview with Access Hollywood, Leslie revealed that she's not opposed to reprising the role of Gwen in the future.

"There is no way I would ever say, 'No'," the star declared. "I had the most fantastic time filming Downton. I really did, so I would love to go back, but... I was always told that I would only ever be in the first series."

Leslie added: "I always knew that my character would have a happy ending at the end of it all. [Leaving Downton Abbey] didn't come as a shock... But it was fantastic. I loved it."

She went on to credit Downton Abbey with helping her land her current job as Ygritte on Game of Thrones.


READ MORE:  http://www.digitalspy.com/british-tv/s183/downton-abbey/news/a380088/game-of-thrones-star-rose-leslie-im-open-to-downton-abbey-return.html




Monday, December 19, 2011

Downton Abbey's Laura Carmichael fears her character Lady Edith will be always the bridsemaid and never the bride.(MSN celebrity)

Updated: 19/12/2011 11:57 | By pa.press.net

Laura Carmichael reckons there will be more heartache in store for Lady Edith
Laura Carmichael reckons there will be more heartache in store for Lady Edith

Downton Abbey's Laura Carmichael fears her character Lady Edith will be always the bridsemaid and never the bride.

While her sisters Lady Mary and Lady Sybil have their choice of men, Lady Edith has endured a series of heartbreaks. Speculating on what might be in store for her character in the third series, set in the roaring twenties, Laura joked she may take up flying after learning to drive a car.

Laura said: "Um, more heartache, who knows... the possibility of finding love - I don't know. No doubt, always the bridesmaid!"

She added: "We were talking about planes and trains. So maybe I'll take up flying now that I can drive."

Edith's older sister Mary Crawley is engaged to newspaper magnate Sir Richard Carlisle but is in love with Matthew Crawley, whose proposal she previously turned down.

Viewers are gripped as to whether Mary and Matthew will admit their love in the forthcoming Christmas special.

http://celebrity.uk.msn.com/news/lady-edith-always-the-bridesmaid