The Denver Post

“Downton Abbey” creator’s new TV show is painfully accurate

- By Lynn Elber

The period costumes of a Julian Fellowes drama can be excruciati­ngly accurate, as an actress in his new series “Belgravia” discovered.

The Epix drama from “Downton Abbey” creator Fellowes and executive producer Gareth Neame is set in 19th-century London and features Tamsin Greig, who starred in the TV comedy “Episodes,” and Philip Glenister (“Cranford”).

Asked if the elaborate outfits were difficult or easy to work in, Greig gave a quick reply.

“Do you think that they look easy?’ she said. “I was under the care of an osteopath within a week of filming, and I realized that I should have prepared better by wearing a corset for a few hours each day in the weeks up to beginning shooting.”

It’s impossible to get the silhouette of the 1840s without the binding undergarme­nt that women wore, she said. If the limited series’ actresses look like they’re comfortabl­e, Greig added, “it’s really great acting.”

Alice Eve (“Bombshell”) and Ella Purnell (“Sweetbitte­r”) also star in the series and joined in a presentati­on to TV critics Saturday. The six-part drama will debut April 12.

“Belgravia,” set in the grand London neighborho­od of that name, was adapted by Fellowes from his eponymous 2016 novel. Asked to compare the series to “Downton Abbey,” the hit TV drama that unfolded in the early 1900s, Fellowes said the projects reflect the periods in which they’re set.

For the Epix limited series, it’s the “rise of the great Victorian era of manufactur­ing and money and ... the expansion of London,” he said. “Whereas you could say that ‘Downton’ was on the other side of the hill, it was part of the decline, particular­ly as we follow it through the ‘20s.”

“Belgravia” is a “can-do show,” he said. “It’s really about people achieving what they want, despite the difficulti­es the society places in their path . ... But I hope it is essentiall­y a kind of uplifting tale.”

Fellowes was pleased by the reception for last year’s big screen version of “Downton Abbey,” which arrived four years after the series ended on PBS, but was noncommitt­al about the possibilit­y of a second film. He’s got another TV series in the works, “The Gilded Age” for HBO, set in 1880s America.

 ?? David Livingston, Getty Images ?? Tamsin Greig, Philip Glenister, Ella Purnell and Alice Eve of “Belgravia” speak on stage during the EPIX segment of the Winter TCA Tour in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 18.
David Livingston, Getty Images Tamsin Greig, Philip Glenister, Ella Purnell and Alice Eve of “Belgravia” speak on stage during the EPIX segment of the Winter TCA Tour in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 18.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States