& the slipper still fits
Showing posts with label downton abbey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label downton abbey. Show all posts

Downton Abbey, Season 2

Downton Abbey Season 2 starts on the 8th (this Sunday) for us slowpokes over here in the US on our local PBS stations. Season 1 is replaying now, but you can catch almost all of it on PBS online. I can't wait for more Downton drama! 

Downton Abbey - back in force

It's official! We officially have an air date for the next season (or 2nd series) of Downton Abbey. In the UK it will begin airing on Sept 18th, 2011 with a 2 hour Christmas Special. US watchers, our starts Jan. 8th, 2012 with no hope of getting the Christmas special.

Series 2 picks up two years after Series 1 and will focus on the years between 1916 and 1918. There are rumors that Matthew will have a new love interest and Mary will also be courted by a wealthy older man. What is completely clear though, is the obvious focus on war and its consequences. Both Robert and Matthew have joined in the army and will no doubt be taken faraway from Downton.

What will be most exciting is to reconnect with all the characters. Two years away from the household at Downton can bring many changes. I think most of us expected the series to pick up right where it left of, but the change will be good for us -- the story lines will be fresh and there will be a sense of mystery and tension behind some of the characters and relationships we had the most questions about. Personally, if Anna and Bates don't do something this season, I might be driven to throw the remote at the TV.

Read more behind the scenes here. And see the Series two trailer here.

Happy Mother's Day

It's Mother's Day here in the States and as a celebration, literary style--well mostly literary style, I thought I would share with you my favorite on screen mothers.


When I started to think about the blog post, I wondered what indeed I would do. Jane Austen's mothers are mostly foolish or mean, and Bronte's mothers are either non-existent or half mad. Mrs. Dashwood, however, was an easy and foundational choice for me. Fearless and proud, she endures the loss of her husband, house, and lifestyle to undeserved and ruthless relatives, and moves her family away from everything they know for a better chance at happiness within their constraints. While Elinor is her voice of reason, it takes a powerful woman to allow her daughter that kind of control and still be the adult head of the family. She is loving, she is kind, and--above all--she reminds her daughters to enjoy life as it comes, without grasping, scheming, or loathing.


Dear reader, you may not like old battle axe Thornton for Margaret's sake, but if you think about it, Mrs. Thornton is a thoroughly stand-up and modern mother. After the suicide of her husband, she took her two young children and raised them with economy and strict focus; she managed John's money so well he was able to lease the mill, and she continues to run it with him on a day-to-day basis. Even though she hates Margaret, she promises to learn to like her when she realizes John is in love with her; and then when John can't hate Margaret even after she's rejected him, Mrs. Thornton vows to in his stead. As a mother, Mrs. Thorton is like a tiger: fierce on the outside, but loving and protective when no one is looking.



When thinking of my featured mothers, Mrs. Bennet was not first on my list. She wasn't even on my list. At a glance, Mrs. Bennet seems like one of the least qualified women to be a mother of five daughters. She's immature, frivolous, and simply wants to get all her girls married off to the first men she can find. And then I took a second look at Mrs. Bennet, because Jane Austen is far more introspective than that. Mrs. Bennet is able to be frivolous because she has (at least) two very level-headed daughters and seeing as how she's raised them well, why should she change her style for the other three? Her immaturity can be likened to the gossip addicts of today's society. And she wants to get her daughters married so that they will be provided for, knowing she has not saved for them on her own. Really, all the Mrs. Bennet is guilty of is a melodramatic disposition and social butterfly syndrome. She is a well meaning mother, who puts her family first, and for tha she's been added to my list.


Lady Crawley is one fierce women. She is unwavering in her modern ideas, while despising shifts in modern society. Above all, she is willing to do anything to protect her granddaughter's inheritance. She holds that quiet type of motherhood: the type where her children think she expects everything of them, when really she simply wants to see them do well and be happy. Lady Crawley is continually surprised by how people see her, and can't seem to understand why one must make way for impolite society in an entrenched history. I love Violet because she is the determined matriarch, the women you think of one way when really she's another, a class act all the way. Considering how wonderful her son is, I'd say she definately nears the top of my favorite mothers list.

While all these characters are wonderful examples of literary mothers, I want to finish this blog post by saying happy mother's day to all the truly wonderful mothers celebrating. You do not just deserve today, but every day to be mother's day. We never appreciate you as much as we should, and I wish this day was more like Christmas, then you may properly feel the love and awe we give to you.

KEEP ME CURRENT 12.11.10

'Voyage of the Dawn Treader' has a better trip to Theaters than 'The Tourist' Rough estimates peg the third Narina movie making at least 29 million, Tourist 19.

Thor trailer hammers its way online

"You have to let things go" Suzanne Collins on Hunger Games movie

The Mortal Instruments Series gets a lead Ladies and Gents, Lily Collins is our Clary. And where I am normally a pessimist about casting news, this one I'm going to be optimistic about. I like Lily Collins; Clare herself supports the casting, and already beat down anti-Lily comments on her blog. I'll wait to rant when Alex Pettyfer isn't cast to play Jace.

Dowton Abbey to air on PBS (in US) on January 9th So excited! I will be watching it on PBS, and blogging about it the next day.