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UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS
 Upstairs, Downstairs Photo courtesy of Goodman Associates CAST
Lady
Marjorie Bellamy .............................Rachel Gurney
Richard Bellamy .......................................David
Langton
James ..................................................Simon
Williams
Elizabeth................................................. Nicola
Pagett
Hudson................................................ Gordon
Jackson
Mrs. Bridges ........................................Angela
Baddeley
Rose..........................................................
Jean Marsh
Sarah.................................................... Pauline
Collins
Emily........................................................ Evin
Crowley
Alfred.......................................................
George Innes
Roberts..................................................... Patsy
Smart
Pearce................................................... Brian
Osborne
Edward .............................................Christopher
Beeny
Laurence .......................................................Ian
Ogilvy
Ruby..................................................... Jenny
Tomasin
Watkins.................................................. John
Alderton
Hazel................................................. Meg Wynn
Owen
Daisy ...................................................Jacqueline
Tong
Georgina Worsley.............................. Lesley Anne Down
Virginia .................................................Hannah
Gordon
Alice......................................................... Anne
Yarker
William .................................................Jonathan
Seely
Frederick ...................................................Gareth
Hunt
Lily ..........................................................Karen
Dotrice
PRODUCERS
Rex Firkin, John Hawkesworth
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY 68 50-minute episodes
ITV
10 October 1971-5 March 1972
22 October 1972-19 January 1973
27 October 1973-19 January 1974
14 September 1974-7 December 1974
British Serial
Drama
Upstairs,
Downstairs, originally produced in England by Sagitta Productions
for London Weekend Television (LWT), became one of the most popular
programs in the history of Masterpiece Theatre on the U.S.
Public Broadcasting Service and was beloved throughout much of the
world. The series presents the narrative of the upper class Bellamy
family and their servants during the turbulent first third of this
century in Britain. Their stories, focused individually but always
illustrative of complex and intertwined relationships, unfold chronologically,
highlighting members of both the upstairs biological family and
the downstairs "work family" of servants.
The series accurately represented and mirrored the societal milieu
of its time and has been greatly acclaimed for the producers' and
authors' meticulous attention to accurate period detail. Historical
events served as the context for the characters' situations and
actions in a narrative that carried them from 1903 Edwardian England,
through World War I and the political upheavals of the twenties,
to a conclusion set soon after the stock market crash at the summer
of 1930. Upstairs, Downstairs captured and held a rapt television
audience through 68 episodes in Britain and 55 in America. It was
the most extensive series on Masterpiece Theatre and brought
a new and refreshing image of British television to many Americans
whose only perception of British programming, not necessarily correct,
was of ponderous adaptations of dated British literature. In so
doing, the series brought a great many new viewers to PBS and Masterpiece
Theatre.
According
to long-time Masterpiece Theatre host Alistair Cooke, quoted
in Terrence O'Flaherty's Masterpiece Theatre, "I loved Upstairs,
Downstairs. When I first saw it, my reaction was, 'I'll be amazed
if this thing doesn't really hit the headlines. It's marvelous.
It allows you to identify with the downstairs people while vicariously
enjoying the life of the upstairs people.'" Followed closely episode
by episode, the upstairs and downstairs families became a part of
"our" family. The audience genuinely cared about the characters,
came to know them intimately and developed a strong empathy for
them.
The
Bellamys and their staff of domestic servants resided in a five-story
townhouse at 165 Eaton Place, Belgravia, in London, an address well
known to the series' many fans. The upstairs family includes Lord
Richard Bellamy (David Langton), his first wife Lady Marjorie (Rachel
Gurney) who dies tragically on the Titanic, their two children James
(Simon Williams) and Elizabeth (Nicola Pagett), Richard's second
wife Virginia (Hannah Gordon), James' wife Hazel (Meg Wynn Owen)
who dies in a flu epidemic, and cousin to James and Elizabeth Georgina
Worsley (Lesley-Anne Down). Among the most memorable of the downstairs
staff are Hudson the butler (Gordon Jackson), Mrs. Bridges the cook
(Angela Baddeley), Rose (Jean Marsh), Ruby (Jenny Tomasin), Edward
(Christopher Beeny) and Daisy (Jacqueline Tong). Among the many
other characters who appeared in a number of episodes perhaps Sarah
(Pauline Collins), Watkins (John Alderton), Sir Geoffrey the family
solicitor (Raymond Huntley), and Lady Pru (Joan Benham) are the
most fondly remembered by viewers. The large cast, only partially
noted here, is considered to include some of the best actors from
British stage, film and television. The series earned the respect
of professional peers as well as that of the audience. Its cast
won numerous awards, both in Britain and America, including 8 Emmys,
Writers Guild of Great Britain Awards, American Drama Critics Circle
Awards, Golden Globe Awards, and a Peabody Award. Angela Baddeley
(Mrs. Bridges) received the C.B.E. (Commander of the British Empire),
awarded in the Queen's 1975 New Year's Honours List. According to
Queen Elizabeth II, Upstairs, Downstairs was her favorite program
in 1975 and Mrs. Bridges her favorite character. In addition, Gordon
Jackson (Hudson) received the coveted Queen's Order of the British
Empire Award.
The idea for the series came from actresses Jean Marsh (who played
the role of house-parlour maid Rose) and Eileen Atkins. The series
was developed by John Hawkesworth, whose long and distinguished
career in film and television extends from art director on the film
The Third Man to producer of the well regarded Sherlock Holmes
series featuring Jeremy Brett. This was the first program from LWT
to be purchased for Masterpiece Theatre and only the second
non-BBC program to be scheduled. Upstairs, Downstairs was
one of the first series of its type to be produced on videotape
rather than film (though certain scenes, mainly exteriors and location
shots, were shot on film). It was one of the first series on Masterpiece
Theatre that was not biographical or based on a written work.
It was created purely for television. As originally produced for
British television each episode in the series was written in three
acts. On Masterpiece Theatre each episode was shown without interruption.
Significant
confusion was created when the series was shown on American television
because thirteen episodes of the first 26 produced for British television
were not shown. This created a rather bizarre lack of continuity.
Six of the first original British episodes had been taped in black
and white due to a strike. Masterpiece Theatre only wanted
episodes in color and so the first episode ("On Trial") was revised
and reshot in color for American television. Of the first 26 original
episodes shot for British TV, Episodes 2 through 9, 11 and 12, 16,
19 and 20 were not shown on American television. These "lost" episodes
were not made available for American viewing until 1989. The original
black and white version of episode number one has never been made
available to American television.
Upstairs,
Downstairs was first shown on British television in 1971 and
continued through four series of 13 episodes each (two Edwardian
series, a later pre-war series, and a World War I series) and a
fifth series of 16 episodes (post-war) making a total of 68 episodes
produced and broadcast. On Masterpiece Theatre the original
26 Edwardian period episodes, pared down to 13, were first shown
6 January-31 March 1974. From 3 November 1974 to 26 January 1975
the post-Edwardian pre-war series of 13 episodes was broadcast.
The 13 World War I episodes were shown 1 January- 28 March 1976.
The final series of 16 post-war episodes was broadcast 16 January-1
May 1977 making, in all, 55 episodes shown on Masterpiece Theatre.
The 55 episodes were later repeated on Masterpiece Theatre
and selected episodes were shown as a part of a "10th Anniversary
Season Festival of Favorites" and as a part of the "Twentieth Anniversary
Favorites" series early in 1991. Upstairs, Downstairs was
the inspiration for the short-lived CBS television series Beacon
Hill that concerned a well-to-do Boston family and their domestic
staff during the 1920s (broadcast fall, 1975).
Upstairs,
Downstairs is one of the highest rated programs in the history
of PBS. The series has been syndicated to both commercial and non-commercial
stations in America and is one of the most successful and watched
dramatic series in television history. It is estimated that approximately
one billion people in over 40 countries have enjoyed Upstairs,
Downstairs and the series is still in active syndication.
-Steve
Runyon
FURTHER
READING
Cooke,
Alistair. Masterpieces (A Decade of Masterpiece Theatre).
New York: VNU Books International-Alfred A. Knopf, 1981.
Floyd,
Patty Lou. Backstairs with Upstairs, Downstairs. New York:
St. Martin's, 1988.
Hardwick,
Mollie. The World Of Upstairs, Downstairs. New York: Hold,
Rinehart and Winston, 1976.
________________.
Upstairs, Downstairs III: The Years of Change. New York:
Dell Publishing, 1987.(A
novel based on the third series of thirteen episodes.)
Hawkesworth,
John. Upstairs, Downstairs. New York: Dell Publishing, 1973.
(A novel based on the first series of thirteen episodes.)
Hawkesworth,
John. Upstairs, Downstairs II: In My Lady's Chamber. New
York: Dell Publishing , 1987. (A novel based on the second series
of thirteen episodes.)
O'Flaherty,
Terrence. Masterpiece Theatre: A Celebration of 25 Years of Outstanding
Television. San Francisco, California: KQED Books, 1996.
See
also British
Programming; Jackson,
Gordon; Miniseries
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