Entertainment

Post-Downton Abbey, stars seek acting challenges

The end of Downton Abbey after six seasons means new career paths for its stars, with both the upstairs and downstairs crew embracing change-of-pace roles — although devoted viewers may want to enshrine them forever as their beloved characters.

Cast members 'can't put a pin in their career and say that's it.'

As the popular soap Downton Abbey winds down, its stars are changing gears, with some set to appear in dramatically different roles than their Downton characters. (Nick Briggs/Carnival Film & Television Limited 2015 for Masterpiece/Associated Press)

What's happening to certain Downton Abbey stars is downright criminal.

Joanne Froggatt, the TV drama's vulnerable Anna Bates, is morphing into a 19th-century serial killer in PBS' Dark Angel

Joanne Froggatt, who portrays the vulnerable Anna Bates in Downton Abbey, will morph into a 19th-century serial killer in PBS' upcoming miniseries Dark Angel. (Justin Slee/PBS/Associated Press)

Michelle Dockery, who plays coolly elegant Lady Mary, is a sleazy American ex-convict in TNT's Good Behavior

And Kevin Doyle, the good-hearted Mr. Molesley, is a bad-hearted police detective in Netflix's Happy Valley.

The end of Downton Abbey on PBS' Masterpiece after six seasons means new career paths for its stars, with both the upstairs and downstairs crew embracing change-of-pace roles — although devoted viewers may want to enshrine them forever as their beloved characters.

"Anybody who's watched and loved Downton is going to remember these characters for the rest of their lives," said executive producer Gareth Neame. But cast members "can't put a pin in their career and say that's it."

'Fancy doing something a bit different'

British actors are especially keen on variety and like "to move away from things they've been previously successful with," Neame said.

Froggatt said change is part of acting's allure.

"After playing a role that you've loved playing for years, there is a certain part of you that goes, 'I fancy doing something a bit different," she said.

Since appearing in Downton Abbey's first three seasons, Dan Stevens has avoided lord-of-the-manor roles. The British actor, seen here with Ben Stiller in Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb, will appear in upcoming film and TV productions like Beauty and the Beast, Colossal and Legion. (Kerry Brown/20th Century Fox/Associated Press)

That's the path taken by Dan Stevens, who's avoided lord-of-the-manor roles since playing Matthew Crawley in the drama's first three seasons. Among his upcoming projects: the films Beauty and the Beast and sci-fi drama Colossal" and Legion, a Marvel Comics-based TV pilot for FX.

After Sunday's Downton Abbey finale (9 p.m. EST), here's where to find its former gentry and servants:

  • Hugh Bonneville (Lord Grantham): Possibly the actor staying closest to his Downton pedigree, he plays Lord Louis Mountbatten in the Indian independence movie Viceroy's House.
  • Laura Carmichael (Lady Edith): Takes on a sibling role again in the 1940s history-based romance, A United Kingdom, introducing her sister to her future husband, an African prince.
  • Brendan Coyle (John Bates): Plays English politician Augustine Birrell in the historical Irish film drama The Rising. Also in the romantic movie Me Before You, based on the novel by Jojo Moyes.
  • Elizabeth McGovern (Lady Cora): Writing and recording her fourth album with the band Sadie and the Hotheads. In April, starting rehearsals at the National Theatre in London for Sunset at the Villa Thalia.
  • Lilly James (Lady Rose): Takes on a classic part, Elizabeth Bennet, in an adaptation of the non-classic parody of Jane Austen's novel, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. In The Kaiser's Last Kiss, a German soldier falls in love with James' Jewish Dutchwoman.
  • Allen Leech (Tom Branson): In the film Hunter's Prayer, based on Kevin Wignall's novel For the Dogs, Leech plays the former boss of a hired assassin whose assignment goes awry.
  • Penelope Wilton (Isobel Crawley): As lonely wife Pauline in the upcoming British TV series Brief Encounters, set in the 1980s, Wilton is one of four women whose lives are changed when they start selling exotic lingerie at house parties.
British actors are especially keen on variety and like 'to move away from things they've been previously successful with,' said Downton executive producer Gareth Neame. (PBS, Carnival Film & Television Limited 2012 for MASTERPIECE, Nick Briggs/Associated Press)