'Downton Abbey' fans are not just drawn to the ITV period drama for its touching storylines and great characters - the glorious costumes are also an a...
'Downton Abbey's Brendan Coyle, officially the thinking woman's currant bun since his first appearance three series ago as troubled manservant John Ba...
'Downton Abbey's third series comes to an end this Sunday evening. As viewers prepare to leave the Crawley family and their servants behind (at least ...
Downton Abbey stars and on-screen sisters Michelle Dockery and Laura Carmichael have shaken off their prim and proper look in the hit ITV period-drama...
So Titanic crashed to a climax with its fourth and last episode. Tellingly, the "Previously on…" bit revealed about as much info as the previous thr...
Last week I had the pleasure of being part of a very special event. Julian Fellowes, the hugely-gifted writer behind Downton Abbey, joined the Wellbeing of Women team for a coffee morning in Parliament's River Room.
Unlike the iceberg, of course, we could have seen Titanic's problems a mile off. It's clear from Fellowes' most recent creation Downton Abbey that he believes the mere proximity of people from different social classes is enough to make a decent drama. Forget character, story, emotion...
April 2012 marks the centenary of a disaster that still haunts us. Shortly before midnight on 14 April 1912, the maiden voyage of the White Star Line's beacon of luxury and progress, RMS Titanic, ended in tragedy when she struck an iceberg and sank with the loss of 1,517 lives.
"This is not a catastrophe story," says David Calder, who plays Titanic's famous bearded captain Edward Smith in Julian Fellowes' four-part drama (sta...
Oscar-winning writer Julian Fellowes has criticised James Cameron's hit Titanic movie for vilifying the ship's first officer by portraying him as a co...
If I could make two recommendations for George Osborne to support growth in the creative sector it would be to introduce tax credits for video games and high end TV production in the UK, similar to those that have been enjoyed by the film industry for the last 20 years.
"I think I would have scrambled over everyone in sight to get off," says Celia Imrie, reflecting on the sinking of the Titanic in 1912, which killed m...