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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

DOWNTON ABBEY. DAN STEVENS

The Brits' Surprising Emmy Hit


‘Downton Abbey’ creator Julian Fellowes and the cast of the critically acclaimed period drama talk to Jace Lacob about their Emmy nominations, the show’s insane popularity, and what’s coming up on season two.   

                             

Few could have anticipated the fever that critically acclaimed British costume drama Downton Abbey brought when it first premiered last year in the U.K. or when it arrived on U.S. shores in January. Since its launch on PBS’s Masterpiece Classic, which brought in 13 million viewers, even more have discovered it on DVD and online.
Now season two is almost here, and the cast and crew are eager to find out how many of its numerous Emmy nominations will lead to wins in September. Downton Abbey’s second season will air in the U.K. beginning Sept. 18 and then stateside on Jan. 8, 2012. (Unlike the first season, which had roughly 20 minutes eliminated from the full run, season two will air in the U.S. in its entirety, without any edits.) Meanwhile, the period drama is up for a whopping 11 Emmys, including outstanding miniseries or TV movie, a category that is typically owned by pay-cable network HBO.
“Nothing is more pleasurable then when you start to reach other countries,” said creator Julian Fellowes (Gosford Park). “You take a show which is, after all, in some ways quintessentially English, and yet you find an audience beyond England. I don’t want to be too jejune. Of course, I love being nominated for things, and it’s great when you win them, but the main thing is just it demonstrates that your show has traveled, and that’s marvelous.”
The Downton Abbey cast has been shocked by the level of loyalty the show engenders. “I’ve spent so many years reconciling myself to the fact that the work I do, only I will really care about,” said Elizabeth McGovern, who plays lady of the house Cora Crawley, Countess of Grantham. “I was shocked and surprised.” Her co-star Michelle Dockery, who plays eldest daughter Lady Mary, said that they knew they were onto a good thing. “But you can never predict how an audience is going to respond,” she said. “I was surprised by the enormity of the success.”
Romantic lead Dan Stevens—who plays the middle-class heir to Downton, Matthew Crawley—pointed to the show’s iconoclastic nature as to why it has clicked with audiences. “You can play a little more fast and loose with the rules,” he said. “It doesn’t have to be all repressed and [full of] unspoken things. There can actually be a few cheeky lines here and there that give a nod to the modern era.”
“Apart from the brilliant writing, the costumes, and the nostalgia, I think they’re seeing something completely new,” said Dockery. “There comes an energy with that, which just keeps the audience wanting more. We were always told about this ‘Downton depression’ that people suffered once it finished.”
Fellowes admitted that he was surprised by just how much viewers on both sides of the Atlantic have taken to Downton, but pointed toward the fact that the show isn’t your typical costume drama, since it’s structurally more analogous to American primetime shows.
“It’s much closer to The West Wing or NYPD Blue or ER,” said Fellowes. “The whole notion of having lots of stories all going simultaneously … and you can’t take your eye off it for a minute or you’ll lose the end of that story, or lose the middle of that one. The old period drama was much more of a single narrative linear construction, where, honestly, you could go to the loo and then make a sandwich and come back and pick it up.”
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Downton also speaks to our modern mores rather than merely reflecting those of pre-WWI England, said Fellowes. “If it had been done in the ‘50s, the family would all have been incredibly gracious and charming and the servants would all have been comedic,” he said. “If it had been done in the ‘90s, the servants would all be gallant and downtrodden and the family would all be horrible, mendacious, slimy, and selfish. But we’ve gone a different way, really. They’re just a group of people who are living in this house and working, and some of them are nice and some of them are less nice, some of them are funny and some of them aren’t, and so on. But there is no automatic division between the two groups in the house.”

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