The Denver Post

Third “Downton Abbey” movie is coming, one of its stars says

- By Remy Tumin

The Crawleys have endured heartbreak, abandonmen­t at the altar and a burst ulcer. They have celebrated the births of heirs, inter-class marriages and (eventually) a child born out of wedlock. They even hesitantly embraced the advent of new technology like the telephone and moving pictures.

After six seasons on television and two movies, it seems they’re not done yet.

The Crawleys will return for a third — and possibly final — “Downton Abbey” film, one of its stars told BBC Radio 2.

“There will be the final film,” Imelda Staunton, who played Queen Mary’s lady-in-waiting in the first two movies, told host Zoe Ball on Wednesday, taking long breaths between each word. “There you go.”

Ball said she hoped she hadn’t gotten Staunton in trouble for speaking out of turn.

“I don’t care,” Staunton said.

Focus Features, which distribute­d the past two films, did not respond to a request for comment. But rumors are already swirling about the plot and potential additions to the cast.

Across six seasons on ITV in Britain and PBS in the United States, Julian Fellowes, who wrote all 52 episodes, swept the tensions of the upstairsdo­wnstairs class struggles into an idyllic escape for viewers. Gossipy zingers. Quiet class warfare. Socialism. Empire waists and beaded dresses. Dame Maggie Smith.

From 2010 to 2015, the “Downton” characters had gone through it all. Or so fans thought. But Fellowes wasn’t done and brought “Downton” to the big screen in 2019, much to the delight of fans.

Set in 1927, the first “Downton” movie followed a royal visit to the

Grantham estate. But as Downton’s staff is pitted against the royal attendants, an assassin attempts to kill Queen Mary. Meanwhile, Staunton’s character, Lady Maud Bagshaw, is at the center of an inheritanc­e dispute.

A second movie, “Downton Abbey: New Era” (2022), followed the Crawleys as they welcomed a crew to Downton for the filming of a silent movie. Other members of the family went to the south of France to uncover a mystery.

In a red carpet interview before the “New Era” premiere, Fellowes said that his goal with the first film was to see if there was an appetite for more “Downton” antics, “and I think we establishe­d that there was if we could get it right.”

With the second film, as well as with the entire series, his goal was for “people to have a good time,” Fellowes said. “I don’t see anything wrong in giving them a nice night out.”

 ?? BEN BLACKALL — FOCUS FEATURES ?? Hugh Bonneville, from left, Elizabeth Mcgovern and Laura Carmichael in a scene from the film “Downton Abbey: A New Era.”
BEN BLACKALL — FOCUS FEATURES Hugh Bonneville, from left, Elizabeth Mcgovern and Laura Carmichael in a scene from the film “Downton Abbey: A New Era.”

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