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Downton Abbey Update

Women rule on new season of Downton Abbey; Houston after-show goes national

Tarra Gaines
Jan 4, 2014 | 3:00 pm

Americans so love the upstairs/downstairs denizens of Downton Abbey, they’ve made it the highest rated television show in PBS’s history. Houstonians so love to talk about Downton that they’ve made Manor of Speaking the Downton after-show the highest rated local show in HoustonPBS’s history.

With the season four premiere of Downton and the season two premiere of Manor debuting Sunday, now is the time to find out why we can’t we stop discussing the aristocratic Crawleys and their loyal and occasionally wonderfully devious servants. Just what new twists will be our twitter water cooler fodder for the next two months? To answer these questions I went to Houston’s foremost expert on Downton gabbery, Manor of Speaking host Ernie Manouse.

So why do 21st century Americans find ourselves so obsessed with the fictional lives of early 20th century British aristocracy?

Manor of Speaking is Manouse’s creation, inspired by a very unproductive vacation to Amsterdam. Finding the season one and two episodes on his hard drive so compelling, Manouse says, “I ended up spending my whole vacation in my hotel room watching Downton Abbey.” Wanting someone to talk with about the show, Manouse came home and pitched an after-show talk show to HoustonPBS.

Inside the Manor

The first season was such a success that Manor is in the process of going national.

“We’re pleased to announce that now our version of the show, our Manor of Speaking is being distributing nationally,” revealed Manouse. This means other local PBS stations across the country may carry the show live after Downton, though this year that will probably mean streaming the show online.

However, Manouse envisions a time of Manors everywhere. “We assume that next season, next year, we’ll see a lot more stations pick us up. I also think that as stations try to produce a show like this they’re going to realize how expensive and how complicated it really is and they’ll see it’s not as easy as they think. They’re going to think: Hey, why don’t we just use this one?”

Like Downton, some changes are coming to Manor. Fan favorites like tweet-bearing, droll butler Mr. Rogers and Helen Mann, former Vice Consul of Press & Public Affairs at the British Consulate General will be back, but Dr. Robert “The Professor” Patten, who is not teaching in Houston this semester, will be replaced by St. John Flynn, program director for Classical 91.7FM. Also new is a wall of remembrance that pays tribute to those Downton residents who have left us for the great beyond (a.k.a. Hollywood).

When I asked Manouse if going national meant less of a reliance on Houston guests, he assured that would not be the case. “We just happen to be lucky enough to live the in the fourth largest city and have the best experts in the world anyway,” he said.

About the Abbey

During our talk, Manouse kept mum about major plot developments on Downton, but after we discussed the show’s central conflict from the very first episode, the female characters’ struggle to make their way in the early 20th century under laws and class-conscious customs that constrain them, Manouse was willing to describe what he sees as a larger theme working through season four.

If you look at it though those eyes it’s going to be very interesting to see how all these women see the change that’s happening around them.”.

“I think it really becomes a very strong woman’s year. If you look at it though those eyes it’s going to be very interesting to see how all these women see the change that’s happening around them,” he explained.

With the dramatic death of Mary’s husband and Downton heir Matthew Crawley, the women are going to have to sometimes come out of their pivotal but behind-the-scenes roles and into a more prominent spotlight.

“I think part of it is that we lost Matthew, and that was a strong male character. We really don’t have another strong male character upstairs,” explains Manouse. “You have Robert [Downton’s patriarch], but Robert seems very much controlled by the women in his life. And Tom Branson, he’s just not that strong a character because he always feels like a an outsider. So really it is the women, it’s multiple generations of women and how they are reacting with the times.”

So why do 21st century Americans find ourselves so obsessed with the fictional lives of early 20th century British aristocracy?

“I think even though it’s set as a period piece, they deal with contemporary issues. We as the audience we don’t feel disconnected from the issues,” believes Manouse. “The same issues we struggle with daily, our challenges and problems, by putting them in a period piece, dressing them up the way they do, we can enjoy watching them, but we can also relate to it. It’s a bit of fantasy but a bit of reality at the same time.”

Coming Up Next

One vexing issue Americans rarely have to confront is being the last country to watch any television show. Downton gives us a taste of the wait that the rest of the world must do for our entertainment exports. Manouse would never give away spoilers, but since season four already was broadcast several months ago in the U.K and the Christmas episode is two weeks old, I can give a few vague hints at what awaits. (Spoiler alert: Don't read further if you want everything to be a total surprise.)

Matthew wasn’t the last character to go because an actor wanted out. One other character will leave Downton, Sunday, but with less drama.

The last episode, the Christmas special, which we’ll be getting in late February, will bring back Shirley MacLaine as Martha Levinson, Cora Crawley’s richer-than-god American mother and she’s bringing along her son Harold, played by Paul Giamatti, because who doesn’t love Paul Giamatti? I, for one, can’t wait to see round two of the Americans vs. Dowager Countess quip off.

Finally, one dramatic episode early in the season managed to shock viewers in the U.K even more than Matthew’s death. What will happen and who will it involve? Stay tuned to Downton and then vent your surprise or outrage with the crowd at the Manor.

The fourth season of Downton Abbey premieres on Channel 8 at 8 p.m. Sunday.

Downton Abbey cast in front of manor
PBS.org
The fourth season of Downton Abbey premieres on Channel 8 at 8 p.m. Sunday.
unspecified
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Hottest Headlines of 2025

Ren Fest drama tops Houston's hottest entertainment headlines of 2025

Holly Beretto
Dec 30, 2025 | 11:00 am
Texas Renaissance Festival
Texas Renaissance Festival/ Facebook
The Texas Renaissance Festival returns October 11.

Editor's note: This year was a busy one for CultureMap's Entertainment section. A lawsuit brought changes to the Texas Renaissance Festival, country star Post Malone left a life-changing tip, and one of Houston's most respected pitmasters came up a little short on the national stage. Houston’s entertainment news proves the diversity of our city.

Read on for the 10 top Houston entertainment headlines of 2025:

1. Winner of Ren Fest lawsuit plans to keep the event mostly unchanged. The Texas Renaissance Festival got a new owner this year, following a contentious court battle. But what would that mean for the beloved fall festival that generations have come to love? Surprisingly little for attendees. The new owner vowed to keep RenFest mostly the same. “...We're sticking with what works,” said Anthony Laporte, the attorney representing the new owner. “...Both the old owners and the new ones are planning to give visitors a great time.”

Texas Renaissance Festival
Texas Renaissance Festival/ Facebook

The Texas Renaissance Festival has a new owner.

2. Judge rules Texas Renaissance Festival owner must sell his kingdom. For more than half a century, George Coulam reigned as king of the Texas Renaissance Festival in Todd Mission. In 2023, he agreed to sell the beloved festival, then reneged on the deal. In May, a Grimes County judge ordered the sale to go through in the culmination of a long legal battle. The drama behind the festival was depicted in the HBO docuseries Ren Faire.

3. Star Houston pitmaster flames out on Food Network barbecue competition. On July 20, Houston pitmaster Greg Gatlin’s run on the Food Network show BBQ Brawl came to an end. Judges criticized his preparation of New York strip with grilled broccolini with Calabrian chili. The owner of Gatlin’s BBQ and Gatlin’s Fins & Feathers, took the disappointing news in stride. “It hurts, but I think I did my family’s name proud,” he said.

4. Premier Houston nightclub group reopening iconic strip club this month. This summer, the Colorado Club became part of The Clé Group’s portfolio. The strip club was a magnet for A-listers in the 1990s and early ‘00s. Following the death of founder Dallas Fontenot in September 2021, the venue passed to his son Dakota, who ultimately decided to sell the club. The new owners upgraded the food and implemented a host of other improvements like state-of-the-art lighting and sound, an updated design, and multiple stages.

5. Bun B, Ludacris, Keith Sweat, and more throw epic birthday bonanza at RodeoHouston. Houston hip-hop legend Bun B threw himself a birthday party on March 7, in his appearance at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo’s Black Heritage Day. TSU’s Ocean of Soul and Prairie View A&M’s Marching Storm bands performed sets, and video greetings from celebs were part of the pre-concert festivities. The concert had strong performances but some unfortunate technical glitches.

6. All the White Linen Night parties happening in the Heights and beyond. From its beginnings in the Heights, White Linen Night has spread across the Bayou City. This list gave readers a guide to 25 of the summer tradition’s parties and specials, from a build-your-own succulent bar to band performances.

7. Post Malone shocks Houston bartender with 'life-changing' $20,000 tip. When the music superstar stopped in to visit The Railyard on Christmas Eve 2024, bar regulars picked up his tab. But that didn’t stop him from leaving a $20,000 tip for bartender Renee Brown. "His generosity … blew me away,” she said. “This definitely wasn't the Christmas Eve I was expecting, but one I'm forever thankful to have had."

8. RodeoHouston taps Post Malone, Bun B, Reba McEntire, and more for 2025 concerts. One of Houston’s most anticipated lineups was announced in January, at a media event at NRG Center. Performers for the March 4-23 event represented a variety of genres, heavily focused on country, but also including pop, rock, hip-hop, R&B, regional Mexican, and Christian music.

9. Nine Inch Nails hammers Houston at career-spanning Toyota Center concert. Rock And Roll Hall of Fame inductees Nine Inch Nails returned to Houston and the Toyota Center on September 12, opening the show with the industrial ballad “Right Where It Belongs.” “NIN has always had a forward propulsion,” wrote our reviewer Craig Hlavaty. “There’s no concept of nostalgia, just raw nerves endlessly being rediscovered by fresh ears.”

10. Post Malone's road show lifts up RodeoHouston with heart and soul. Months after headlining the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, Post Malone was back in the Houston spotlight in a show that “was easily the hottest ticket of the season.” He used the evening to share his latest album F-1 Trillion, “a collection of expertly crafted pop-country.”

hot-headlines
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