‘Downton Abbey’ to Return with a Third Movie

Cast members Elizabeth McGovern and Hugh Bonneville arrive for the world premiere of "Downton Abbey: A New Era" in London, Britain, April 25, 2022. (Reuters)
Cast members Elizabeth McGovern and Hugh Bonneville arrive for the world premiere of "Downton Abbey: A New Era" in London, Britain, April 25, 2022. (Reuters)
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‘Downton Abbey’ to Return with a Third Movie

Cast members Elizabeth McGovern and Hugh Bonneville arrive for the world premiere of "Downton Abbey: A New Era" in London, Britain, April 25, 2022. (Reuters)
Cast members Elizabeth McGovern and Hugh Bonneville arrive for the world premiere of "Downton Abbey: A New Era" in London, Britain, April 25, 2022. (Reuters)

The fictitious Crawley family and their servants running a sprawling English country estate in the early 20th century are returning for a third "Downton Abbey" movie, which will feature old and new faces.

The award-winning "Downton Abbey" gained a huge following in Britain and the United States after it first aired as a television series in 2010. It went on for six seasons and was followed by two films, released in 2019 and 2022.

In a statement on Monday, Universal Pictures, Focus Features and Carnival Films said series creator Julian Fellowes had written the third film in the "Downton Abbey" franchise and that many original cast members, including Hugh Bonneville and Elizabeth McGovern - who play patriarch Robert Crawley and his wife Cora, respectively - would return for the new movie.

"The Holdovers" actor and Oscar nominee Paul Giamatti and Joely Richardson, most recently seen in Netflix series "The Gentlemen", join the cast with the former playing Cora's brother Harold Levinson, the statement added. Giamatti played the character in a Christmas special.

"The Crown" star Dominic West, who played actor Guy Dexter in the 2022 film " Downton Abbey: A New Era", will reprise the role in the new movie.

Simon Curtis will also return as director after helming the second movie.



Hundreds Gather in Central London to Mourn Singer Liam Payne

Hundreds Gather in Central London to Mourn Singer Liam Payne
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Hundreds Gather in Central London to Mourn Singer Liam Payne

Hundreds Gather in Central London to Mourn Singer Liam Payne

Hundreds gathered Sunday in London’s Kensington Gardens to mourn Liam Payne as fans around the world grieved for the One Direction singer who died this week.
Directioners, as supporters of the massively successful boy band are known, left tributes in London, Glasgow, Paris, Sydney and New York this weekend as they celebrated the life of the 31-year-old who died Wednesday after falling from a hotel balcony in Buenos Aires.
In London, they clapped and sang after gathering near a statue of Peter Pan, the fictional boy who never grew up created by J.M. Barrie. The mourners, mostly young women, left heart shaped balloons, photographs and flowers at the base of the statute, which sits next to a narrow path next to a waterway known as The Long Water, The Associated Press reported.
Mindful of the crowds in the limited space, organizers asked fans to leave their tributes then move away to allow others to approach the statue.
Fans Lauren Anderson and Natasha Bradley, both 23, said they wanted to be with others who shared their grief.
“Your parents, they don’t really understand how much (One Direction) really meant to you growing up,” Bradley said, explaining why she came to the park.
The vigils followed those that took place outside the Casa Sur Hotel in the chic Palermo neighborhood of Argentina’s capital immediately after Payne fell from his third-floor hotel room. The four surviving members of One Direction issued a joint statement saying they were “completely devastated” by the death of their bandmate.
One Direction rose to worldwide popularity soon after the band was formed in 2010 from five young singers who auditioned for the X Factor, a British TV talent show. The band broke up in 2016 after producing five albums that sold more than 70 million copies.