DOWNTON ‘HAVEN’ IN OUR LIVES
TV drama set in Yorkshire ‘offers order in era of chaos’
IT’S A television drama whose success has seen life in a fictional Yorkshire country house in the early 20th century enjoyed around the world, to massive critical acclaim.
And according to one of the show’s stars, ITV’s Downton Abbey offers the comfort of an ordered and class-bound society in an era of “chaos”.
The period piece transports viewers back to a time of rigid social hierarchies, which Harrogate-born actor Jim Carter believes offers a haven from modern life and politics.
Carter, 70, who appears in a special retrospective of the show next summer, plays the traditionalist Charles Carson and believes the attitudes of the butler and the world he inhabits are part of Downton’s appeal. He said the class system is in the DNA of the British people and the early 20th century is an era that appeals to an international audience living through a perceived period of instability in the modern world with its “mad people in charge”.
Carter said the romance of Downton offers an illusory ideal but he favours the fall of the class system. He has benefited from social fluidity, which allowed him an education and a career that was chosen not enforced.
But the actor believes the appeal of Downton and his character is one of preserved traditions.
He said: “It harks back to a more ordered time. It’s a big part of the appeal. It’s safe, and it seems like a safe world.
“Everything is ordered, everything is in its place. In the chaos of the modern world I think that’s a nice haven.
“You can’t get the toothpaste back in the tube, you can never go back. We just have to cope with the chaos of modern living - too much information, too many mad people in charge. It’s a spooky world.”
Downton is set in a different
I live a very different life from the one I was born into. Harrogate-born Downton Abbey actor Jim Carter.
world, between 1912 and 1926, which encompasses the period of the First World War and the first Labour government but also shows a deferential working class and traditional social attitudes.
Carter said of the period show’s huge appeal: “It’s been surprisingly successful. The surprise is the reach of the success. I just got back from the south island of New Zealand and I got recognised, I got back from India and I got recognised in the holy city of Pushkar. Carter said the vision of a stratified English society is romanticised and the Crawley family were, perhaps unrealistically, “the most benign employers ever”.
Carter said although the order of the system might appear comforting in the modern world of seemingly unstable politics and technological change, the ability to adapt is valuable. He said: “It’s a good thing that the class system is breaking down, I think people should be judged on merit, not on birth. I don’t think Mr Carson would necessarily agree.
“It’s very, very British. Britain is a traditional country, we hang on to our traditions, with the church and the monarchy. It was a very static society. I like the fluidity of modern society, the journeys we can make.
“I was born in Harrogate in Yorkshire and I live a very different life from the one I was born into.I just wish that there was opportunity through education, etc, that everybody could have those possibilities.
“I don’t think I was ever inhibited by class. Education breaks all those barriers, really.”
Mr Carter is returning to Downton, Highclere Castle in Hampshire, for a retrospective on June 22, with clips from the show used to tell the stories of the series. Tickets are on sale on December 14.