Scottish Daily Mail

Is Downton’s terrible Thomas plotting his own spin-off show?

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS

Clever Barrow. Just two episodes into the final series of Downton Abbey (ITv) and he’s plotting how to turn the demise of the show into the dawn of his own superstard­om.

We’re used to seeing under-butler Thomas Barrow ( rob James-Collier) scheme and conspire, blackmaili­ng the ladies’ maids and seducing the footmen. He’s pure poison in a penguin suit.

But the skids have been under him since Cora’s maid Baxter (raquel Cassidy) refused to be his spy upstairs in m’lady’s chamber.

Barrow used t o be able to manipulate everyone in the stately home but now, no matter what he does — rescue lady edith from a bedroom blaze, expose the new nanny as a drunken child-beater — nobody even pretends to like him.

The game’s not lost yet and Barrow knows it. There is a precedent for a smarmy, sarcastic, minor character to bail out of a smash-hit show as it is ending and to pop up with his own series that goes on to scoop more awards and make him far more money than the original ever did.

remember Cheers, the all- star sitcom set in a Boston bar? right down the cast list was a chap called Kelsey Grammer, who had the occasional line as a pompous snob living in terror of his shrill wife.

He wasn’t so much a character, more a cardboard cut- out at the end of the bar. His name was Frasier and, against every expectatio­n, he landed a self-titled comedy pilot that went on to become the most erudite and dazzling sitcom ever made in America.

That’s the big prize. As Downton ends, a new period- drama- soapopera- comedy called Barrow can begin. Better still, give the title an exclamatio­n mark — Barrow!

Our cunning hero laid the groundwork by applying for the post of assistant butler at a nearby country house, a job that combined butling, valeting, chauffeuri­ng and, I’ll be bound, engineerin­g hi s new employers in or out of some fresh sticky mishap every week. How’s that for a sitcom situation?

Chuck in the odd guest appearance by Downton stars and U.S. cable channels will be fighting to commission the first 50 episodes before a word is written.

Not everyone was working as diligently as Barrow. lady Mary seemed to have forgotten her history: she told Carson that he had been ‘in this house man and boy for half a century’ — though keen viewers will remember he actually started his career as half of a music-hall double act and came to butling late in life.

And Daisy the kitchen- maid (Sophie McShera) appeared to be auditionin­g for a revival of the Sixties hippie musical Hair, waving her arms around and railing against ‘the system’ like a one-woman protest movement.

There were plenty of girls wearing flowers in their hair in Cider With Rosie (BBC1), though this wasn’t San Francisco but Twenties Gloucester­shire.

Not that you’d know it from the accents. The children sounded like The Wurzels were their voice coaches, while everybody else was practising the all-purpose rustic burr known as BBC West Country, probably in the hope of landing a part in Poldark.

laurie lee’s much-loved memoir isn’t so much an autobiogra­phy, more a fragmented collection of vignettes in language closer to poetry than prose.

This adaptation, narrated by Timothy Spall ( Timmarvey Spahrll, in Wurzel- speak), kept much of the l yrical quality: laurie’s first sweetheart, for instance, had ‘flesh smoother than candle wax like something thrown down from the moon’.

But the storyline was a muddle, staggering from laurie’s toddler days to teens, back and forth, as though the scenes had been plucked at random from a village hall tombola barrel.

Characters came and went without explanatio­n. Who was the man beaten to death by the villagers? What happened to the schoolmist­ress who was slung over a pupil’s shoulder?

Perhaps the Beeb assumed we all know the book so well from schooldays that half a story was plenty. But in that case, why make a Tv version at all?

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