
EMMYS: PBS' 'Downton Abbey'
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_RAY RICHMOND contributes to Deadline’s TV coverage_ It’s been 100 years since the Titanic sank but less than a year since a TV event that kicked off with that very disaster, _Downton
Abbey_, took the Emmy Awards by storm last September. Relatively unheralded and on unsexy PBS, _Downton Abbey_ managed to launch its own British invasion in claiming six trophies (including
top movie/miniseries as well as the supporting work of Dame Maggie Smith.) The show about the lives of English aristocrats and servants in the early part of the 20th century seemingly became
a pop culture phenomenon the instant it arrived on our shores, demonstrating again that the Brits do period drama better than anyone else. But in the what-have-you-done-for-me-lately? world
of the primetime Emmys, _Downton_ (a co-production of NBCUniversal’s Carnival Films in the UK and PBS affiliate WGBH/Boston) is about to find out how the other half really lives. Because
it’s no longer a miniseries but a plain old drama series in its second season, it won’t be competing for Emmys this time with longform projects like HBO’s _Mildred Pierce_, _Too Big to Fail_
and _Cinema Verité_ as it did in 2011, but instead against American TV’s real aristocracy, which will include some combination of AMC’s _Mad Men_, _Breaking Bad_ and _The Killing_,
Showtime’s _Homeland_ and HBO’s _Game of Thrones_ and _Boardwalk Empire_. That’s assuming, of course, that _Downton_ earns second invitation to the party as it’s expected to. “We’re going to
be in a whole other orbit,” acknowledges Rebecca Eaton, executive producer for PBS’ _Masterpiece_ and _Downton Abbey_. “We won against some very stiff competition last year from HBO, for
which we all remain enormously proud. But in American TV, the drama series track clearly is the faster track. It’ll be interesting to go toe-to-toe with those very different shows and see
how we do.” Indeed, it’s highly unusual – but not quite unprecedented – that a series like _Downton_ would start out as just another miniseries import, only to shift to Emmy’s® version of
the heavyweight division for its second go-around. It happened as recently as 2007-08 with USA Network’s _The Starter Wife_. What it means is that Downton was never really a miniseries but
clearly benefitted from being able to call itself one for a year. Perhaps even more atypical is that a public broadcasting entry is being mentioned in the same breath for awards attention as
the biggest kids on cable. Then again, there have been few sensations to match _Downton Abbey_, which started out with strong ratings in its first season, only to shift into overdrive for
Season 2. It launched year two in January with 4.2 million viewers, up 18% from its Season 1 average. That number swelled to an audience of 5.4 million for its February finale, PBS’s largest
tune-in since the premiere of the Ken Burns’ doc _National Parks_ in September ’09. Anytime you’re in Burns territory, you’re breathing rarefied air. WATCH ON DEADLINE The numbers didn’t
much surprise _Downton_ exec producer Gareth Neame, who co-created the series with writer/exec producer Julian Fellowes. “It’s been a massive phenomenon in England from the start and is the
No. 1 non-homegrown series in every country where it plays,” Neame stresses. “We thought it would be liked by the anglophile community that tends to embrace these kinds of shows in America.
But what’s really extraordinary is the way _Downton_ has entered the vernacular outside of television and is now satirized and talked about in the daily dialogue.” Why has this thing so
connected with the U.S. audience in particular? Neame believes that, while this is an expressly British genre, _Downton Abbey_ is “actually rendered in quite a contemporary way. American
viewers watch it and think, well, the scenery is different and the actors sound different and the costumes are different, but the storytelling tone is really quite soapy and modern.” That’s
not by accident. Fellowes set out from the start to give the project the distinctly American style of layering in multiple storylines vying for the audience’s attention. “I think it fits the
more modern expectation of television better than the traditional rather slower-moving period drama of years ago, featuring a single narrative,” Fellowes says. “The period we’re depicting
also is a big part of the appeal. There’s just something about that pre-Internet world, the scale of which I just think feels more understandable. A period that’s more settled and ordered
and controlled certainly carries a more nostalgic appeal.” Not that Fellowes necessarily had any clue that he was crafting a classic when he started putting pen to paper for _Downton_ in
2009. “This sort of phenomenon happens only once in a career, and only if you’re very lucky,” he figures. “With everything you work on, you just try to do your best to get it right. The
timing has to be right too, and that’s something you can never really control.” But the trail being blazed by _Downton_ can’t be minimized in terms of how it has redefined the way North
American audiences view overseas entertainment. Michael Edelstein, president of international television production for NBCU – which acquired Carnival Films in 2008 – believes, “This series
has broken down so many barriers and stigmas. We now know that a British drama can become a global hit and draw new people to our business because they see the potential. It’s already
helping to attract great creative talent our way.” Edelstein adds that Fellowes’ unique gift is in leaving the audience wanting more. “It’s aspirational,” he says. “Every character, rich or
poor, is trying to have the best life possible.” Neame agrees that the series is “perhaps forging a reappraisal of how history is done. I think suddenly audiences are starting to go, ‘Wow,
history is fun.’ ” Certainly, American TV has made great strides in crafting historical dramas over the past several years, from HBO miniseries like _Band of Brothers_, _The Pacific_ and
especially _John Adams_ along with, of course, AMC’s _Mad Men_. We have traditionally left the costume drama to the Brits in part because the UK remains addicted to its glorious past, while
conversely the more optimistic America is traditionally more obsessed with the present and future, a notion Fellowes and Neame endorse. But _Downton Abbey_ has become so rapidly ingrained in
American culture that few now make the grievous error of calling it ‘Downtown’ Abbey. And while Brits like Maggie Smith and Hugh Bonneville stir this pot, some American performers have
seeped into the mix as well with Elizabeth McGovern (as Cora Crawley) and, coming in Season 3, none other than Shirley MacLaine joining the cast as Cora’s mother Martha Levinson. This is
indeed a British-American coproduction to its very core. So popular has _Downton_ grown that Neame has had to begin scotching rumors, including one that circulated in April that had Smith
poised to depart the show after the third season (presuming there will be at least a fourth). “We do not discuss future storylines,” Neame said in a statement, “however there is no truth in
the story that Maggie is leaving the show.” There may, however, be truth in the conjecture that a _Downton Abbey_ theatrical film could soon be in the works, Neame allows. “There is talk of
all sorts of things surrounding this program,” he says. “But my focus, as well as that of Julian and everyone involved, is to continue to work toward sustaining this as a TV show that’s
remembered for years to come.” _(Photos courtesy of NBCU / Carnival Films)_