Flowering Downton Abbey

On Sunday evenings, we find ourselves whisked away to England with the cast of "Downton Abbey" and sitting on the edge of our seats to watch our beloved show’s final season. While we’re still unsure what the characters’ futures will hold, we pause a moment to look back at the flowers that have colored their world

Whether it’s the loose, creamy petal falling from a simple gathering of garden roses in the show’s opening credits, or the more formal towers of blooms arranged for the wedding of Lady Rose and Atticus Aldridge during the season five finale, flowers are ever present in Downton Abbey, the award-winning British period drama about the trials and tribulations of the Crawleys, those fictitious aristocrats now familiar worldwide, and the men and women who serve them. Aside from adding color and texture to the series’ already lush sets, seasonal flowers help paint a picture of life revolving around a great English country house in the early 20th century, explains Downton’s production designer Donal Woods.

Case in point: a fleeting scene in which one of the Crawleys’ gardeners wheels to the house buckets and buckets of fresh-cut purple tulips and yellow daffodils. Seconds later, we see footed bowls—just the sort advocated by Gertrude Jekyll in her 1907 book, Flower Decoration in the House—brimming with spring bounty across the Crawleys’ dining table. “With their vast gardens and glass conservatories, these houses historically had an abundance of flowers and potted plants to bring indoors,” says Woods.

Whether or not to the manor born, the English are known for their love of gardens. Ladies of English country estates would organize annual flower shows benefitting local charities, where townspeople displayed their horticultural efforts. In season one, the Dowager Countess is “encouraged” to relinquish her award for best bloom in the village to hardworking William Molesley. This is just one of the many floral scenes in Downton Abbey, which airs on Masterpiece on PBS. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE
Whether or not to the manor born, the English are known for their love of gardens. Ladies of English country estates would organize annual flower shows benefitting local charities, where townspeople displayed their horticultural efforts. In season one, the Dowager Countess is “encouraged” to relinquish her award for best bloom in the village to hardworking William Molesley. This is just one of the many floral scenes in Downton Abbey, which airs on Masterpiece on PBS. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE

Indeed, today at Highclere Castle in Newbury, where Downton is filmed, several glasshouses can be found harboring roses and fruit for the not-fictitious Earl and Countess of Carnarvon. Considering the property’s expansive woods, parklands, flower gardens, and glasshouses, it seems Downton’s art department might be tempted to raid Highclere’s stash, but Woods says, “No, that wouldn’t be fair to Lady Carnarvon.” Instead, the crew brings in its own mix of fresh and silk flowers, the latter being an option when the fresh variety will likely perish before a certain scene is finished filming.

In general, Downton set decorator Gina Cromwell says, the arrangements seen throughout the family’s rooms at the castle are intended to have an uncontrived, timeless English country look. The amount varies by season and situation—less in winter and more during house parties—but three arrangements are usually placed in the drawing room and other living areas. Each “upstairs” bedroom receives at least one gathering of flowers. Rarer are flowers in the servants’ quarters, although eagle-eyed viewers may have noticed in season one that Mr. Bates surprises his burgeoning love interest Anna with dinner on a tray prettified with stems in a glass.

Occasionally specific period trends are referenced. “Modern audiences associate white flowers with weddings, but right after the devastating losses of World War I and the 1918 Spanish flu, white felt deathly, so brightly colored flowers were preferred,” says Woods. He and film and television industry florist Helen Byrne wanted to acknowledge this, so for characters Lavinia and Matthew’s anticipated wedding, timed around the war’s end, the team brought in orange and purple blossoms to fill the Crawleys’ sprawling entry hall. Ironically, though, despite the positive vibes of the upbeat hues, Lavinia herself succumbs to the tragic pandemic and never reaches the altar.

Of course, flowers played a part in on-screen weddings, both upstairs Lady Mary to Matthew Crawley, and downstairs, a hurried civil ceremony for Anna and Mr. Bates. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE
Of course, flowers played a part in on-screen weddings, both upstairs Lady Mary to Matthew Crawley, and downstairs, a hurried civil ceremony for Anna and Mr. Bates. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE

As the series has moved into the Roaring Twenties, the team has been able to dial up the glamour. (After all, while the country house is home base, the Crawleys and their servants do get to their house in London from time to time.) Season four, with its endless social whirl of balls and visits to jazz clubs, was fabulous for a set decorator, says Cromwell: “The flower arrangements needed to be bigger, creating a sense of decadence.”

While grander and more stylized arrangements evoke a cosmopolitan scene, they also on occasion serve a more utilitarian purpose—handily obstructing the reflection of the crew’s equipment in the antique mirrors found at the historic houses used for location shoots, notes Basildon Park house steward, Neil Shaw, who was invited to arrange flowers when Downton filmed at the National Trust property, thereby making Basildon the stand-in for the Crawleys’ London home.

Using garden-style silk flowers specifically chosen by Downton’s art department, Shaw created elegant arrangements for season four’s Christmas special, when Lady Rose debuts in London society, and for season five when she marries Atticus. Is it a bit daunting to arrange flowers for Downton? Absolutely, says Shaw. “Knowing that ‘my’ flowers were going to be seen by millions of people all over the world, I think that Christmas day 2013 was one of the most nerve-racking yet proudest days of my life.”

Flowers play a role in all of life’s special occasions in Downton Abbey’s era, including Lady Rose’s presentation at Court. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE
Flowers play a role in all of life’s special occasions in Downton Abbey’s era, including Lady Rose’s presentation at Court. Photo © NICK BRIGGS/CARNIVAL FILM & TELEVISION LIMITED FOR MASTERPIECE

 


By Courtney Barnes