By Yvonne Villarreal / Los Angeles Times
GRAB your handkerchief: there are just two weeks of production left on Downton Abbey. Like, ever.
The British drama that helped buttoned-up PBS roll up its sleeves to mainstream popularity is getting closer to bidding adieu. And like the good ol’ Dowager Countess, we can only muster a facial expression of incredulity as we hold onto our cane for support.
The sixth and final season will premiere stateside on January 3 on PBS. And just a few days before, on New Year’s Day, the period drama will be memorialized with a float in the 2016 Rose Parade.
But before all the definitive good-byes get under way, some of the cast gathered on Saturday in Beverly Hills for the show’s final panel at the Television Critics Association press tour. Talk of “favorites” and “lasts” were abundant. And fresh.
As we mentioned, there are just two weeks left of shooting (note: almost everyone will wrap in the final week), but filming at the mother ship, Highclere Castle, has already wrapped.
“That was quite an interesting day,” said Hugh Bonneville, who plays family patriarch Robert Crawley.
Laura Carmichael, who plays the often-ignored sister Edith Crawley, added: “It was strange saying good-bye to Highclere Castle because it felt like in a split second it wasn’t our home anymore.”
Michelle Dockery, who portrays golden daughter Mary Crawley, said she and Carmichael wandered around and sat on Matthew’s bench: “We had a bit of a cry.” Bonneville, meanwhile, was surprised the cast even got another go-round.
“We were all expecting to finish after Series 5,” he revealed. “[Creator] Julian [Fellowes] said he felt it would feel a bit truncated, so he asked if we would do another nine episodes.”
Executive producer Gareth Neame added, “Maybe we’re leaving a little bit early, but I think on a high note.”
Wait, hey guys, what about a movie? Like most beloved shows that come to an end, talk of a movie is never too far away. And Neame didn’t rule it out.
“We might—it’s something we’ve talked about,” he said. “I think a Downton movie would be a wonderful thing. But we don’t have a script or a plan as of yet.”
Before all you Downton fans start penning a script, dig through these highlights from the panel:
- A refrigerator is coming! And, of course. Patmore hates it.
- Downton Abbey might have made some dig up their history notes of the era, but Bonneville learned something else from the show: “One thing I’ve learned from the show is that only people who smoke cigarettes are up to no good.”
- Executive producer Gareth Neame said the final season will be “reflective of all six seasons. Deceased characters continue to be referenced.”
- Neame also said that if Downton Abbey had made it to Season 7 or Season 8, they might have made it to the 1929 stock market crash: “I don’t know if I could bear to see [Robert Crawley] go through a financial disaster.”
- Elizabeth McGovern, who plays matriarch Cora Crawley, talked about the serenity of being wrapped up in the nonmodern world: “I’ll miss the peace of it. In today’s world, we’re so inundated with information.” Oh, and she’ll miss being on a hit TV show, she joked.
- What thing from the set do they want to take with them?
Joanne Froggatt (Anna): “The only souvenir I want to take home is Lady Mary, really—and Mr. Bates.”
Carmichael: “I want to take home the set of the newspaper office.”
Bonneville: “I want to take home one of the mustard pots from the dining room.”