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Television
'Downton Abbey': Not Much 'Hurly Burly' Upstairs
Originally published on Fri January 4, 2013 8:46 am
Transcript
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
Yesterday, we brought you into the aristocratic world of "Downton Abbey." OK, cue the music.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
GREENE: The show returns to "Masterpiece Classic" on PBS for its third season this Sunday. The British period drama follows the family of Lord and Lady Grantham, along with their faithful servants.
JIM CARTER: Our lives are dictated by gongs and bells and the rhythm of the day. It is dictated to us by the people upstairs. We live to serve them and to make their world perfect.
GREENE: That's Jim Carter, who plays the loyal butler, Mr. Carson. He stopped by our studios recently, along with other members of the "Downton Abbey" cast. We'll hear first today from the actress Sophie McShera, who plays young Daisy. She's at the bottom of the hierarchy in the household, toiling in the kitchen under the watchful eye of the cook, Mrs. Patmore.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "DOWNTON ABBEY")
LESLEY NICOL: (as Mrs. Patmore) Go to bed when you're done.
SOPHIE MCSHERA: (as Daisy Mason) I'll go to bed when I'm ready.
NICOL: (as Mrs. Patmore) What happened to you? Have you swapped places with your evil twin?
MCSHERA: (as Daisy Mason) I'd like to know where the new kitchen maid is. That's what you promised. We've got a new footman. Where's the kitchen maid?
NICOL: (as Mrs. Patmore) I know, and I'm sorry, but I spoke to Mr. Carson tonight and we won't be taking anymore new on.
MCSHERA: (as Daisy Mason) Except a footman.
NICOL: (as Mrs. Patmore) I don't know how Mr. Carson managed it, because his lordship's put his foot down. (unintelligible) We need seven shillings extra every month.
MCSHERA: (as Daisy Mason) You still kept me here with a dishonest representation.
NICOL: (as Mrs. Patmore) Oh, dear, have you swallowed a dictionary?
(LAUGHTER)
GREENE: Sophie, how much preparation reading, studying did you do to get ready to play, you know, a young woman kind of in this place at this time?
MCSHERA: I cannot tell a lie.
(LAUGHTER)
MCSHERA: I...
GREENE: Don't tell a lie.
(LAUGHTER)
MCSHERA: We have an amazing historical expert called Alastair Bruce who tells us loads that we need to know. But I'm not a bookish actress that's reading lots of books about maids - which maybe I should be, but I'm not. And so I kind of know what I need to know to get by. And when I don't know something, I'll just ask Alastair, because he knows everything.
GREENE: Rob James-Collier, you play Thomas, who, I mean, I just - he's one nasty character.
(LAUGHTER)
ROB JAMES-COLLIER: Thank you very much.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "DOWNTON ABBEY")
MATT MILNE: (as Alfred) I asked Thomas, though, to get to my...
JAMES-COLLIER: (as Thomas Barrow) I owe you? What's this?
MILNE: (as Alfred) The stuff you gave me to clean the tails burned a hole in them.
JAMES-COLLIER: (as Thomas Barrow) No such thing. I gave you some soda crystals. That's all. If you used them wrongly, it's not my fault. This is what comes of making him run before he could walk.
GREENE: Thomas is gay, in the closet, you know, seems so heartless, so manipulating so often. I mean, is he misunderstood in any way?
JAMES-COLLIER: I think so. The more I play Thomas, I started to think why he is how he is. And I think it's definitely rooted in his sexuality, because we must remember this is a time where being a homosexual is illegal, and it was also against God. And it was a more godly time back then. So you have, sort of, society condemning anything to do with homosexuality, describing it as foul and twisted. And if a society is being negative and aggressive towards you, I think it's only human nature to maybe react to that as a defense mechanism and be aggressive back towards society.
GREENE: It sounds like this is something you've thought about a lot as you've kind of decided how to play the character.
JAMES-COLLIER: Well, we got a lot of time between scenes. So, I thought, instead of procrastinating...
MCSHERA: We think about a lot of things.
GREENE: Be productive.
JAMES-COLLIER: Be productive, and actually think about my character for once.
GREENE: OK, that last voice there was Rob James-Collier, who plays Thomas. We brought the rest of the cast in at this point. As we go on, you'll hear Jim Carter, who plays the butler, Mr. Carson, later the esteemed Lord and Lady Grantham played Hugh Bonneville and Elizabeth McGovern. But first, Joanne Froggatt, who plays Anna, the level-headed lady's maid. Now you, our listeners, sent us some questions on Facebook, and we tried out this one.
How uncomfortable are these costumes?
JOANNE FROGATT: Very. Well, for the ladies, seasons one and two, the corsets were very, very restrictive and very tight. So after 12 hours in one, you were really, you know, desperate to get it off and go home and put your jeans on. And I don't know how, as a housemaid, you know, these girls did manual labor in those things because they, you know, you can't bend in them. It's difficult to tie your shoelaces in one. So - but season three, because of the fashion change, the corsets changed, as well, because the shape changed.
GREENE: I imagine it's hard to act in them, too. I mean, it's...
FROGATT: Yeah. I should imagine it's a lot harder to act in one on the stage. You'd have to be very, you know, careful how tight you had your corset so you could still breathe and project and everything.
CARTER: The costumes, whilst they were uncomfortable to wear, they do dictate how you stand, how you behave. You can't slouch. You can't be relaxed in those costumes. And we have to remember at all times, it was, you know, a very formal era. Chair backs were not for your back to rest on. They were for servants to pull out. You never slumped. You're always - certainly, the servants, you're always on the...
GREENE: Yeah.
CARTER: ...yeah, always at attention.
GREENE: Sophie, you play Daisy. You wear a very dirty costume down in the kitchen. Are you washing that thing? Or is it...
FROGATT: I am, yeah. Mine's not that uncomfortable, because I've been wearing it for three years. So I've stretched it out.
(LAUGHTER)
FROGATT: But, yeah, it's getting washed. I know it (unintelligible) told the world that I stink.
GREENE: You are here to declare that that is not true.
FROGATT: And I went out with a costume designer the other night, and she's livid with me. She said, stop telling everyone we don't wash our costume. And they do wash them, but they are - sometimes we film really long days, and day after day after day. So, you know, sometimes it might not get washed for two days. Maybe that's, I mean...
CARTER: But there is a bit of fashion envy between downstairs and upstairs. Isn't there? I mean, let's face it.
FROGATT: Not at all, Jim.
(LAUGHTER)
CARTER: Oh, I heard you, that you wear the same black dress for three years and the hemlines are going up and the buckles are reducing upstairs.
GREENE: You just want to put on the tails sometime and look formal, exquisite.
CARTER: Yeah.
FROGATT: I have to admit, yes.
GREENE: So we have two of you from upstairs and four of you from downstairs. Who has more fun doing the filming? Where's the fun?
UNIDENTIFIED GROUP: Downstairs.
GREENE: It seems to unanimous.
HUGH BONNEVILLE: Well, we have plenty fun upstairs. What are you talking about? We get a suite in a beautiful house. We get to play silly parlor games in between takes, waiting for the cameras to set-up. But no, I'm sure there's a lot more banter and bread roll-throwing in the kitchen.
ELIZABETH MCGOVERN: It's just a rumor I hear.
CARTER: And there's a formality to the scenes upstairs which leads into the behavior, I think, really. You know, the...
GREENE: Your behavior, I mean, as people up there.
CARTER: As actors, yeah, because you're spaced around a dinner table three feet apart and you, you know, being obedient English actors, we sit in our places. We're waiting to work. You know, there's not so much hurly-burly upstairs.
GREENE: It doesn't seem right to throw an egg at someone as a joke.
CARTER: Not really. I mean...
MCGOVERN: It's not quite the same.
CARTER: Although Maggie Smith's a bit of a tinker like that.
(LAUGHTER)
GREENE: Well, thank you all so, so much for stopping by, and we've all gotten to know onscreen, and it's been really, really fun to get to know you in person.
MCSHERA: Thank you so much for having us.
UNIDENTIFIED GROUP: Thank you.
JOANNE FROGGATT: Thank you very much.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
GREENE: That was Hugh Bonneville, Elizabeth McGovern, Rob James-Collier, Sophie McShera, Jim Carter and Joanne Froggatt, the cast of "Downton Abbey." And you can see the new season on "Masterpiece Classic" on PBS this Sunday. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright National Public Radio.