Blogging the Abbey: Season premiere
Russell: There are so many reasons to be glad Downton Abbey is back on PBS. Tuxedos! Attractive characters with strikingly perfect teeth for early 20th-century England! Mrs. Patmore!
But the reason I am happiest to have Carson and Co. back on American television is that it gives me a chance to write something with you, Rose. And so when you suggested that we blog this season of Downton Abbey, I couldn’t agree to it fast enough. The only thing better would be having you in the same room to watch together in person. But until the fates bring the universe back into order and have us living close to each other again, this will have to do.
So let’s get to it! (Needless to say, this series of posts will comprise discussions of the most recent episodes, and will be rife with spoilers. Fairly warned be ye, readers!) What did you think? I really liked it, except for the parts that I hated. What about you?
I’ll start off with two things I liked, and a confession. Even though I found the lead-up to it contrived (a sadly recurrent flaw in the show’s writing), I enjoyed the moment when Cora gave Nanny McSatan the sack. Lady Grantham has always appealed to me most when she’s allowed to do something more than smile a wanly loving smile, and Elizabeth McGovern was wonderfully steely in that scene.
I’m also delighted that Lady Edith has morphed from her sad-sack jilted bride/least winsome sister persona into a glamorous, sophisticated and confident woman about town, and that she has a gentleman admirer who actually seems to love her. I will warn you now that if the show rehashes the “older man dumps Edith” plotline from last season, I will fly into a frothing rage. Let Edith stay happy, Julian Fellowes!
And my confession? I didn’t really miss Matthew. Have you forgiven the show for killing him off, especially since the writers apparently didn’t want to?
Rose: I am thrilled to do this, too! Some of the greatest moments of my life have been watching TV with you and making snarky comments. That fact is probably an indication of…something about the quality of both my life and our relationship. But let us set all such questions aside, shall we, and get down to managing the estate.
I confess: I missed Matthew Crawley. I am now in that phase of life when I glance at gossip magazines and recognize approximately 2.47% of the stars. It is, then, the relatively rare male star with whom I fall in love. In the past few years, it has only been Matthew, Jon Hamm, the guy from The Americans, Martin Freeman, Kyle Chandler, and Idris Elba. (I had to break up with Damian Lewis, my first and only ginger love, over his shaved head and complete lack of character coherence this season in Homeland.)
Matthew’s eyes. That voice. His deep integrity and concern for the poor. His eventual realization that everyone benefits if fabulously wealthy people employ servants to ensure they never venture forth from their bedrooms each morning unfortified by tea. And that wearing fabulous evening clothes if you are to be an earl is simply nothing to be ashamed of.
Was it his fault that the writers of the show have apparently never heard that one should avoid dei ex machinis? And that these writers resorted to, shall we say, rather tried-and-true melodramatic flourishes, such as miraculous recovery from paralysis? The awfully convenient death of the woman who stood between the impeccably honorable Matthew and the otherwise brittle Lady Mary, who had awakened sexually and morally under his mesmerizing blue gaze? The sudden inheritance that saved the estate?
Speaking of which, what terrors do the producers of this show wreak on their actors? It’s a successful show, but the talent can’t seem to get away fast enough – Lady Sybil, Matthew, Mrs. O’Brien. Do the showrunners get actors in the period mindset by denying them their smartphones and antibiotics?
I agree completely about Nanny McSatan and Cora’s cool strength and American practicality, an underused asset on the show. I also am glad we have left behind Edith-as-plotting-evil-sister, Edith-as-driver, Edith-as-budding-writer-who-has-demonstrated-no-previous-interest-in-the-written-word, and settled down with, as you say, likable urban sophisticate Edith who wants to marry the guy who clearly adores her. Although a devastated Germany in the wake of the Versailles Treaty and experiencing hyperinflation may not turn out to be the best choice for the honeymooning couple? Just a thought. Although it might be fun to see them ogling gender-bending avant-garde artists at decadent Berlin nightclubs.
Getting back to Cora, however, what on earth happened to that cool American practicality when it came time to hire a lady’s maid who all but cackles and tents her fingers? I wish I could have a job interview like this. Miss Braithwaite: “My aunt? What aunt? Oh, my aunt, yes, yes.” Cora: “You’re hired!” Never mind about double-checking with your reference whom I will see before the day is out. Please, do come work for me in a job that involves seeing me naked and vulnerable and handling my most expensive jewelry and clothing.
So plausibility and nuanced characters are still not Downton Abbey‘s thing. But I do look forward to Lady Mary having some thoughts on reforming the estate and tussling with the Earl. How about you?
Russell: Well, thus far Mary’s managerial skills seem limited to looking intently at a farmer while he talks about sheep, and looking intently at Branson while he talks about tracts of land. While I hardly begrudge anyone the chance to look intently at Branson (whose myriad irritating qualities as a character do not cancel out his merits as an object of intented looking)…
[OK, now I have to digress and gripe a little bit about Branson. If Matthew’s transition from “who needs a man to help him put on a jacket?” to “where is the man who is supposed to be here helping me put on my jacket?” was a wee bit convenient for the arc of the story, Branson’s transformation from revolutionary proletarian firebrand to mannered denizen of the drawing room drives me bananas. Not that I particularly liked the old Branson, but maybe the writers could sneak in a passing acknowledgement of his previous character traits? No?]
Where was I? Oh, yes. Mary, the Earl, and the management of Downton. Yes, I am curious to see how the conflicts between the Earl and Mary pan out. However, since his befuddled hidebound incompetence and her brittle chilliness are my two least favorite things to watch on the show, I fear there will be ample supply of both as they story unfolds. We’ll see.
Cora’s response to the Scandal of the Ruined Mystery Garment (What the hell was that, anyway? And maliciously-destroyed clothing is another plot point that need not be recycled again.) cancelled out a lot of the pleasure of watching her sack Nanny McSatan. It beggars credulity that she would really believe Anna would behave the way Thomas implied, or that she would have had the Earl speak to Bates about it instead of going to Mrs. Hughes or Carson first. I didn’t buy it, and also wish it weren’t the preamble to yet another “Thomas Schemes with the Lady’s Maid” plotline.
However, speaking of Thomas, the thing I’d like most to see is him getting a love interest for real, neither a caddish lord nor unrequited passion but an actual on-the-q.t. boyfriend. Not only would I not mind seeing a same-sex romance for its own sake, but the only times we see Thomas as anything other than a malevolent sociopath are when his gayness is in play, and I’d prefer to see more nuance to his character. What would you like to see?
Rose: Part of the reason historical fiction is so interesting is that we want to see how people lived then. However, it’s not quite so much fun when it feels as if the showrunner is holding your hand saying, “See? Look at that! Pregnant women smoked back then! And no one knew how to use those new-fangled victrolas!” So a certain subtlety is required; a subtlety which has, alas, occasionally eluded the grasp of the makers of Downton Abbey.
Glimpsing the past through fiction works especially nicely when continuities are stressed, rather than differences. I just finished Deadwood, which I loved loved loved. One of the many awesome awesomenesses of that show was watching the doctor. He isn’t a figure of fun, someone the audience can cluck at while musing about how horrid medicine was back in the bad old days. He had some limitations specific to his time, but he is a surprisingly knowledgeable character.
So, in that vein, in addition to ogling the dropwaist dresses, I would like to see Downton Abbey‘s perhaps surprising continuities with the present. I agree that it would be nice to see Thomas semi-human again, and yes, in a gay relationship. I would like to know how gay downstairs couples managed. Or a gay downstairs/upstairs liaison. Similarly, part of me wished Matthew had remained in the wheelchair (that is, alive in the wheelchair) to see how disability played out in that era. And to see his blue eyes smolder intensely as he wheeled himself around the estate.
Maggie Smith in this episode was a bit too dull and sincere. She actually said “I love you”?!?! Her one-liners are often genuinely funny. Although I did like when she told Mary there was more than one kind of good mother. Indeed, I’d like to see Mary feeling her way into discovering a motherhood that works for her.
Other hopes: that the evil lady’s maid and the vacuous dancing cousin are soon dispatched to that great estate of former Downton denizens in the sky; that Anna gets unjustifiably irritable with someone.
Until next week….
It just occurred to me and a cold dread that there might be planned a romance between Mary and Branson. Noooooo-oooo-ooooo!Report
Noooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!
Also, I love “vacuous dancing cousin.” It wouldn’t break my heart if she accidentally danced herself down a well.Report
It “just” occurred to you?Report
I also fear this possibility.
Although, it also doesn’t bother me so much about Branson. He cares so greatly for Sybbie that I could see him becoming a chameleon to protect her; and then a) the rebelliousness still shows through in how he got Mary back on the horse, and b) when he explained that they certainly wouldn’t try to take over that piece of land, because the tenants were doing such a good job – I think on some level… we’re past 1916 now, yes? So a lot of Irish rebels gave up after those terrible days, and saw Ireland’s freedom as a lost cause. I could see him coming to believe that *now*, well, the Yorkshire tenant farmers aren’t too different from the people he grew up with, and his position allows him to protect their interests in a way he’d never have the chance to do back home.
He’s come to terms with having sold out.Report
Is anyone else tired of the Moseley subplot already?Report
I dunno. At least it beats “rehabilitating the streetwalking knocked-up former parlormaid.”Report
Moseley has been moping for his entire Downton existence. I’m with Patrick – get him a job posthaste! Although I’m also with Russell – it’s a better subplot than, say, Bates in prison.Report
Yes. I said to my viewing partner when this episode’s subplot kicked off “Ok, this is like the third time around for a Moseley test, are they going to take advantage of the new season and stop making him the Woobie”
And she said “just watch.”
And I watched. And then said “Nooooooooooooo”Report
sigh….
I guess I need to start watching Downtown Abbey now.
Damnit.Report
I’ve never seen it, and knew only that it’s a British period thingy. So I looked it up on Wiki, and found:
The series depicts the lives of the aristocratic Crawley family and their servants in the post-Edwardian era—with the great events in history having an effect on their lives and on the British social hierarchy.
Which leaves me with a couple questions:
1. Is there anybody on it as pretty as Lesley-Anne Down was?
2. Why isn’t it called Uptown, Downtown?Report
I have no idea who Lesley-Anne Down was, but Dan Stevens is exceptionally pretty.Report
She was kind of like the Keira Knightley of the 1970s.Report
Gotcha.
Sadly, while I’m no expert on lady-prettiness, I think the boys on the show are generally prettier than the girls. In addition to the aforementioned Dan Stevens and th man who plays Branson (mentioned in the OP), the guy who plays Thomas is pretty handsome (despite his character being a soulless vacuum of amoral cold) and the guy who plays his unrequited love interest from last season (the character’s name escapes me) is super dreamy.
The women who play(ed) Ladies Sibyl and Mary are quite beautiful, and Elizabeth McGovern remains so. The problem is that many of the female characters are servants and thus are styled rather severely. YMMV… if you start watching. Which you should.Report
@russell-saunders
The actress who plays Lady Edith is also stunning. Only in TV does that count for plain.Report
@newdealer They have styled her in such an unflattering way for much of the series. But I agree, now that they’re decided on “Let Lady Edith be happy” as a plotline (for now, at least), they’re also letting her look as beautiful as she really is.Report
I always thought Mary looked quite severe as well, actually, which is also a function of the costuming and makeup (and hair). I was stunned by the Sibyl character from jump, though.
And yes, Edith is beautiful as well, but if we’re going to go down the road of “She’s only not extraordinarily pretty for TV” then there’s no point to this discussion, really. Also, isn’t it a reality that a sister in a group of very attractive sisters can feel, for some period in her life, like the ugly duckling even when she’s very beautiful? So it’s not really just a figment of TV that a girl who looks like Edith might come to see herself as having inferior beauty. It’s in that kind of context that she ends up being coded as “the unattractive sister,” but in reality I don’t think the show itself actually posits in any way that she’s not beautiful even in the context of the show. Not judging by the way men have acted around her ever sense she started to come out of her shell of resentment over her sisters’ perceived greater beauty and favor.Report
I’m less swayed by Branson’s charms than the good doctor. Thomas is handsome, but would do well do look a bit less like a corpse.
Views from a straight male: just asked my husband. My husband is quite fond of Lady Mary and Anna. Daisy and Cora will do in a pinch. He was mysteriously not fond of Lady Sybil. Thinks Lady Edith far more attractive than Sybil.Report
It was definitely the less mature parts of myself which found Sibyl attractive. Even so, I occasionally found the character impossibly girlish. I can definitely see where a person who has refined down some of his more juvenile impulses would find Edith’s character vastly more attractive overall. She was certainly always the far more interesting character.Report
I agree with Rose’s husband that Anna is quite lovely. And Mary’s sternness never made her less attractive to me.
The eye candy of both genders is plentiful, IMO. Though I think I lean a little more toward the distaff side of the equation, Sibyl’s loss definitely balances things out more than a bit.Report
The actress who plays Anna is obviously pretty, yes.Report
I haven’t watched it yet. I think I’m still traumatized by last season. Did Lady Cybil’s death have to be that gruesome? Did Matthew and Mary have to arrive at a place of such sublime happiness before…? Edith grew on me greatly last season, but these were the characters (besides the Earl, whom I find bumblingly appealing, and Bates who you can’t not root for) whom I was most invested in through three seasons. I’m finding it hard to want to re-enter this world, knowing what’s missing from it now.Report
Sibyl. I always get that wrong.Report
Mary and Matthew’s romance was always the most appealing aspect of the show to me. So I found it hard to watch this season, too, and I’m certainly less engaged than I was. But the era is so appealing, and we still have the Earl and Mary (of whom I’m fond).Report
I actually found them very unappealing a the start – each separately and together. But after each of their ordeals – the war & injury and the misbegotten engagement – I became much more engaged with the two characters.Report
Cora’s response to the Scandal of the Ruined Mystery Garment (What the hell was that, anyway? And maliciously-destroyed clothing is another plot point that need not be recycled again.) cancelled out a lot of the pleasure of watching her sack Nanny McSatan. It beggars credulity that she would really believe Anna would behave the way Thomas implied, or that she would have had the Earl speak to Bates about it instead of going to Mrs. Hughes or Carson first. I didn’t buy it, and also wish it weren’t the preamble to yet another “Thomas Schemes with the Lady’s Maid” plotline.
Given her supposed fish-out-of-water status as the not-raised-in-the-genteel-environment, I’ve found Cora’s credulity at the staff and her complete lack of awareness at the machinations that go on in the Servant’s Section of the household to be really weird. She had it with O’Brien, too. And with Thomas… well, he’s hardly a scion of reliability when it comes to the transfer of accurate information.
She’s an American, for chrissake. She might be a wealthy American, but she likely didn’t have a lady’s maid growing up, and she should be more aware of these people as people instead of just hands behind a curtain, incapable of telling falsehoods to milord. Or milady.
I was hoping that Lord Grantham could perhaps reclaim a tad bit of the character competency he appeared to have in the first season instead of falling farther down the Fred Flinstone crevasse of ineptitude, but they seem dead set on using, “Lord Grantham is being an idiot again!” as a major plot point this season.
C’mon, dude, I get that you’re landed gentry and all but you’ve had too many moments that seemed to bring you to a moment of humility to not progress a little. Your sole contribution in the “not a complete screwup” pile is your loyalty to Bates, hiring him, and keeping him on in the first season. Since then you’ve been an obstacle in every way.
Give the guy something constructive to do, once in a while.
Always nice to see Maggie back, doing her WWTDDD? routine.Report
Wealthy Americans had lady’s maids.
I wonder if the show will ever address that she might be Jewish? Isn’t her maiden name Levinson?Report
I had the same question. You’d think they’d have made mention of it by now, though, wouldn’t you?Report
I get frustrated at Lord Grantham. But then on the other side of things, it seems rather important that SOMEONE should act in the way most people in those upper-class positions would’ve acted. We’re still talking about a time and class where women *were* meant to be shielded. And I think to some degree his asininity wasn’t just the selfishness that he was accused of, but also a reaction to his own unresolved grief over Matthew’s death. A side effect of all that stiff-upper-lip-keeping.Report
I was going to predict that Edith’s love interest (I forget his name) would become a German citizen just in time for the hyperinflation, but Rose beat me to it. I would guess that in reality, any wealthy Britisher who’s made his fortune in publishing and who takes on German citizenship would be wise enough to keep at least a sizeable number of assets in Britain and not transfer it all to a country that had just lost a world war, but I would also guess that the writers of “Downton” would decline to take that into account.
I agree with the complaints about Thomas. Even if it weren’t his gayness that was so often in the background when he pursues his dastardly deeds, his badness is almost entirely so one-note and his character is so flat–bordering on the psychopathic, in my opinion, which is not where I think the Downton writers (or the audience) really want the story to go–with so little development, that I don’t like the Downton uses him.
True, there are some times when we see Thomas in a more sympathetic light and we see a more complicated personality. I personally don’t blame him for injuring himself to get out of the war, although the gist of the story is that his actions are blameworthy while William’s, for example, is supposed to have a noble (for a commoner) heroism. Also, there’s that scene in a past season where Thomas is almost exposed and possibly arrested for being gay, and he makes a heartfelt, if anachronistic, statement about how he has nothing to be ashamed of. (I’m not suggesting so much that the sentiment is anachronistic, but that someone at his time wouldn’t have expressed that sentiment in the way the character did).
Many of the characters, in fact, are too flat. The good ones are too good, and too consistently good, and the bad ones are too bad, and too consistently bad.
Still, my wife and I really like the show, and we plan to keep watching this season. I just see a lot of lost opportunities for the show to be truly great.Report
It didn’t occur to me while watching, but I agree that Branson’s taking to his new life like a duck to water without Matthew’s ongoing tutelage (and occasional necessary intervention and topcover) is the most far fetched thing about this episode and diminishes the character.
I disagree about vacuous dancing cousin. There is a lot of room for growth there, more than any other existing character, and the perfect vessel (aside from Daisy) to illustrate the passage from Edwardian to Elizabethan England. (as Edith is, as you say, finally a fully formed character, but seems destined to be in the epicenter of the apocalypse that was mid-20th century central Europe).
I kinda like the fact that Thomas being gay and Thomas being a total jerkwad are independent attributes of each other. That’s one thing this show has handled consistently well. And I also like that his scheming paid off through sheer luck, in terms of Nanny Mcnasty being so obviously nasty. Regression to old habits to me makes perfect sense, and this time he rolled the hard six (vice his war call up and the black market fiasco)
What is started to get really old to me (besides Wooby Mosely, as mentioned above), is the love quadrilateral between Ivy, Daisy and the two other downstairs dudes. Somebody needs to get together, and somebody else needs to find a mate in the village or elsewhere.Report
I could kind of feel Branson starting to learn to walk like a duck toward the end of last season – and to his surprise, liking it. He obviously truly loved Sibyl, and he knows that his daughter(?) is their family as well. I sort of felt that he was beginning to accept the place that that made for him in that world last year, not least because it’s so much more comfortable and secure to raise a child in that environment, with all that help. I still haven’t watched, but I’m not at all surprised to hear that’s how things develop, and I don’t find it out of character. And, as to ability, I don’t find it surprising that, given the opportunity, me would be able to rise to it and learn the various aspects of the business(es) quickly. Again, especially as a single parent. Who knows, maybe we’ll see him studying law & business before the series is over.Report
“Who knows, maybe we’ll see him studying law & business before the series is over.”
Why though, he already knows it. 🙂
That’s my point, even given raw intelligence, a diligent work ethic, and natural leadership skills, he’s still being asked to be the CEO of a firm that has been run with mediocrity over most of the previous two decades in an industry that is undergoing a rapid change – and with a Chairman that’s not really on board with any changes. And all this with experience that amounts to a one year internship in the previous Chairman’s office.
It would be like asking a 28 year old with only a bachelor’s in political science and an internship at Bentonville to be named CEO of JCPenny’s tomorrow and be asked to revive that company’s ailing fortunes. I’m not saying it can’t be done, but that new person should be running scared even if under a calm confident exterior.
In other words, I have no doubt of Branson’s determination and will, but the man had, until a year ago or so, zero management (as distinguished from leadership) experience of any kind. And this is exactly the era where the modern bureaucracy of the industrial age (both government and other) is starting to bloom and make it impossible to just juggle all the various pieces and parts of business dealings in your head (and /or by instinct)
(and that’s putting aside the specific politics and prejudices of the era – I well imagine most of the tenant farmers and other business associates take as dim a view of an up-jumped Irishman as the nanny did. To be able to succeed in ‘transformation’, as the MBA’s would call it, in those circumstances would be herculean)Report
would be like asking a 28 year old with only a bachelor’s in political science and an internship at Bentonville to be named CEO of JCPenny’s tomorrow
I mean, not really. It’s not a multinational corporation. It’s one estate, one which he has significant experience working in the operations thereof, and about which, keeping his eyes and ears open, he could have learned a great deal before even coming under the tutelage of Master Crawley. Then he had that apprenticeship. And now he’s having some success running things himself. I don’t find it implausible in the least, though, after having some success, I can see him hitting a point where he might reach a limit to what his knowledge can do, and find further development to be of use. At which point I bet he would be able to get Lord Grantham to let him bring on an understudy to help him manage the day to day, and to finance his studies. Dude’s got it made. No wonder he’s splashing around like a duck in a shallow lagoon.Report
I was incredibly impatient with the whole “bring Mary back to life” storyline until the very end… and then I found myself weeping copiously. Dammit, show.Report