Monday, December 15, 2025
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Oscar Voting Ends Today, Michael Douglas, Jennifer Aniston Added to Sunday Show

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Hello Academy voters. Your long saga comes to an end today. Ballots, paper and electronic, must be returned to the Academy today by 5pm. That’s right. You still have a couple of hours to watch those animated shorts. But otherwise, the party is over. It ends just past Zero Light Thirty. Toss a Lincoln penny in the air even if it makes you Miserable. There will be a silver lining. And, as they say, Argo, you know what.

Meanwhile: Michael Douglas, Jamie Foxx (who will steal the show), Jennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd have been added as presenters to the Oscar show on Sunday. Douglas will be paired with someone very cool to present a Big Award. But let’s not give it all away at once! I don’t want to give any one a Syndrome!

More to come…

Clive Davis on Whitney Houston: “She was in complete denial” about her drug problems

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Most readers will go straight to the Whitney Houston section of record mogul Clive Davis’s autobiography, “The Soundtrack of My Life,” published today by Simon & Schuster. It’s heartbreaking when you realize how much Davis did to try and help Houston. Davis includes letters he sent Whitney from the beginning of her career to the morning after her shockingly thin appearance – a result of her drug addiction– in September 2001 at Michael Jackson’s 30th anniversary concert at Madison Square Garden.

He wrote: “Dearest Whitney: When I saw you last night at the Michael Jackson concert, I gasped. When I got home I cried. My dear, dear Whitney. The time has come.” He implored her to get help quickly. She didn’t listen.

Read the full letter here: http://www.showbiz411.com/2013/02/19/clive-daviss-pleading-letter-to-whitney-houston-september-2011

Clive brought Whitney and her entourage to his home in Westchester County, New York, as a kind of intervention. It wasn’t to make money. It was to save her life. But she wouldn’t listen when he spoke to her with urgency about her problems. “She was in complete denial,” Davis writer. “I knew that if an addict does not want to get help, there ultimately is very little that anyone else can do.”

www.showbiz411.com/2013/02/19/clive-davis-responds-to-kelly-clarkson-an-accurate-depiction-of-our-time-together

There were at least two other interventions and rehab stints that Davis supported but didn’t engineer. But there is just so much you can do: when Whitney got into a fight with a flight attendant on her way to Detroit to shoot “Sparkle,” it made headlines. This reporter was the one who mentioned it to Clive, and suggested trouble was brewing. The disappointment on his face was palpable. It hurt him to hear she might be suffering again.

Davis got the call that Whitney died as he was dressing for his annual pre-Grammy dinner. She had just been in his hotel suite that week. He writes: “There are moments when time stands still, and you feel as if you can’t even begin to comprehend the words that are being spoken to you. That’s how I felt right then.”

Clive Davis Confirms: Michael Jackson Plotted to End Brother Jermaine’s Career

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In his wonderfully juicy new book, “Soundtrack of My Life,” Clive Davis — “the Man with the 45 RPM Ears” –confirms what has always been out there: Michael Jackson purposely tried to kill off brother Jermaine’s career. In the mid 80s, Davis signed Jermaine Jackson and had a couple of hits that  still stand up: “Do What You Do” and “Tell Me I’m Not Dreaming.” Michael didn’t like this.

When Clive hired Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds and LA Reid in the late 1980s to produce Jermaine’s fourth album at Arista Records, Michael had enough, Davis says. The King of Pop tied up Babyface for his own projects, ripping him away from Jermaine. Clive writes: “Jermaine couldn’t believe that Michael, his close brother, would hijack his producers’ material this way.”At a dinner in Paris, Clive recalls, Jermaine was “crying, indeed sobbing at times, so deeply hurt that his brother would do this to him.”

www.showbiz411.com/2013/02/19/clive-davis-responds-to-kelly-clarkson-an-accurate-depiction-of-our-time-together

The older brother was so angry that he wrote his infamous song, “Word to the Badd,” which denounced Michael as shallow and selfish. Michael responded by calling Davis and demanding he take the song off of Jermaine’s new album.

read this about Jermaine’s unpublished book about Michael from 2003: http://www.showbiz411.com/2013/02/19/michael-jackson-v-jermaine-jackson-flashback-to-jermaines-unpublished-book

Davis was between a rock and a hard place, as they say. Jermaine leaked the track so the world could hear his bitterness. Clive “I felt it would be wrong for me to tell an artist to take a song off an album. This was a family and personal matter that they would need to resolve themselves.” Eventually a watered down version of the song was officially released. Davis’s story lines up with the one told by Michael’s longtime pr man, the late Bob Jones, in his book with Stacy Brown.

I’m sorry: this is the petty side of Michael Jackson that his fans don’t like to hear about. But now we have the same story from two people who never knew each other–Bob Jones, and Clive Davis. Bob Jones wrote that Michael systematically destroyed the careers of Rebbe and Jermaine, and even LaToya, but wasn’t fast enough to stop Janet.

 

 

Clive Davis–The Rock Acts That Got Away Included Jackson Browne, John Mellencamp

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Exclusive: Clive Davis has signed hundreds of stars over the years to record contracts.But the two he says slipped away: Jackson Browne– Davis was called away during his audition– and John Mellencamp. But Clive signed plenty. Janis Joplin offered to “ball” him to seal their record contract, sight unseen. He declined. Davis– father of four, grandfather to five, married twice, and the youngest 80 year old you’ll ever meet– tells all in his sensational and engrossing memoir, “The Soundtrack of My Life,” published officially today. Included is a rare personal view revealing Davis’s journey to bisexuality—elegantly told but unsurprising to friends and family. The book is written with Anthony DeCurtis. I couldn’t put it down, frankly.

Davis’s stories are about the history of the American record industry from when he arrived on the scene in  the early 1960s. And while people often accuse Davis of simplifying the truth, or take too much credit, “Soundtrack” lays it all out there—it take 600 pages to name everyone who helped, recall who was where and when, and how it all happened.

Even I was surprised because I know a lot of this stuff—Clive gives a hugely candid and frank account of his interactions with all the execs, and all the artists he was involved with – from Whitney Houston (see my separate story) and Puff Daddy to Janis Joplin, Bob Dylan, Patti Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Santana, Chicago, and Earth Wind & Fire. He turns out to have been a very good observer and an excellent listener.

Davis left Columbia Records in a huge scandal in 1974. But now he sets the record straight: his sudden dismissal was attributed in the press to paying personal expenses—including for his son’s bar mitzvah—from company funds. But it was a set-up, of course, fueled by politics at Columbia/CBS designed to oust him. A second scandal erupted, prompting a government investigation of payola. Six charges were filed against Davis; five were ultimately dropped. He wound up paying a meager fine of $10,000. When the judge in the case wrote the final order, he apologized to Davis for all the unnecessary bad publicity.

Davis—a self -made Harvard man— was exonerated but things got so out of hand that his license to practice law was suspended. Here’s a revelation: he re-applied in 1996, took the New York state bar exam, and passed with high marks. This was, mind you, at the height of his success running Arista Records.  Now, that is amazing. And to make it even sweeter: as chief creative consultant and house legend, Davis now commands an office with stunning views on the top floor of the Sony Music building—high atop Columbia Records. So there.

Another chess move: Clive almost joined Robert Stigwood to run his record company after leaving Columbia and before starting Arista. This would have been right before “Saturday Night Fever” and the BeeGees broke out. But Ahmet Ertegun killed the deal, Davis says. The backstage conference room stuff in “Soundtrack” is not to be missed.

There are tons of great stories. Some will be disputed, but I doubt Clive was going to include key anecdotes about rock stars he aided if he thought they would contradict him. And it’s the little things that resonate. For instance: he blithely—and without much thought of creating a legend per se—advised Bruce Springsteen on how to use the expanse of a large stage one afternoon. Clive worried that Bruce—who was used to playing guitar by himself—would feel dwarfed at Los Angeles’ Ahmanson Theater opening for Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show. “He was very daunted by the size of the stage,” Davis recalls. “I actually took him by the hand and walked him all the way from one side of the stage to the other, demonstrating  how I believed he needed to move in order to put his incredible songs across in a setting like that.”

A couple of years later, the Boss invited Davis to see him at the Bottom Line. “So Clive,” he said, laughing, “did I move around enough for you tonight?”

You can pretty much dip into “Soundtrack” anywhere. There are numerous jewels here about everyone: Aretha, Dionne, Carly, the Grateful Dead, you name it. I loved the chapter on Milli Vanilli. It starts with a line Mia Farrow says in “The Purple Rose of Cairo”: “I just met a wonderful new man. He’s fictional but you can’t have everything.”  Davis says was he “shocked” when he learned that the German singers they met were not the vocalists on Milli Vanilli’s records. Still, he says, with some pride, the records hold up no matter who sang on them. That’s a true music man.

One thing Davis did that is undisputed: he extended the careers of several legends who almost didn’t have second or third acts: Aretha Franklin, Dionne Warwick, Rod Stewart, Carlos Santana, even Barry Manilow, as well as The Kinks, The Grateful Dead, and Hall & Oates. Manilow was on Broadway at the start of his career, and he’s there now, 35 years later. And Clive is preparing to make a new record with Aretha Franklin this year.

Clive also cultivated many “American Idol” stars. Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, Chris Daughtry, Clay Aiken, Ruben Studdard, and more impactfully, Jennifer Hudson, all grew from Davis’s foresight to make a deal with Simon Cowell when the show began its run.

On another note, which I mentioned on Sunday: Clive had an ear for edgy punk and New Wave rock almost before anyone. He wanted to release Ian Dury’s “Sex and Drugs and Rock and Roll” as a single. His radio people advised him against it. This was in 1978, mind you. Now no one would care. Instead they went with Dury’s “Wake Up and Make Love to Me.” Says Clive dryly: “[it] also promoted sex, but at least kept drugs out of the equation.”

PS Clive will ring the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange this afternoon to launch “Soundtrack.” We’ll watch him on CNBC. 

Dwight Henry Will Write “Feasts” of the Southern Wild Cookbook, Open NYC Bakery

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As the Oscar season draws to a close, there are a few big winners. One is actor Scoot McNairy, who turned up in three movies– “Argo,” “Killing Them Softly,” and “Promised Land.” Scoot–I’ll run an interview with him this week–came out of Oscar season very hot and in demand with casting directors. But the true overnight stars of the season were the untrained actors from “Beasts of the Southern Wild.” That would be nine year old Quvenzhané Wallis and the man who plays her father, Dwight Henry.

Henry may not act in a movie again, but he’s capitalized on his fame beautifully. He’s going to open a branch of his New Orleans bakery in Harlem this spring. Henry’s gone into business with Nobu’s Richie Notar to have a Buttermilk Drop Bakery and Cafe open right next to the famed Lenox Lounge. Notar, who’s first opening Harlow on East 56th St. and Park Avenue, plans to unveil a revived Lenox Lounge in mid to late March. Buttermilk will bake for the Lenox and for customers.

Henry told me the other night at the Harlow tasting–where Matt Lauer and wife Annette were the first guests through the door– that he’s also fielding offers for a cookbook. “What should I call it?” he asked me. I did not hesitate: “Feasts of the Southern Wild,” I replied. Henry promised me free desserts forever. Just what I need!

Meantime, get over to Harlow. It’s opening shortly, and will be a celeb hang most definitely.

Alan Rickman (Don’t Call Him Snape) Snapped Up by ICM Partners

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Exclusive: With four movies in the can, Alan Rickman could not be hotter right now. But don’t call him, Snape, please. (I’ve made that mistake myself.) I’m told that Rickman has just moved to ICM Partners, where he’ll be repped by Adam Schweitzer.  Rickman has already wrapped playing Hilly Kristal in the CBGB movie. He also appears in “Gambit,” the Michael Hoffman movie with Colin Firth, written by the Coen brothers, that has gone missing in the US. “Gambit” has opened abroad already and will keep opening in various countries. But it may just get a DVD release here. Anyway, Rickman is a constant in movies and theater, he works seemingly nonstop, and is good in everything. ICM Partners also recently added Katie Holmes, who is said to be in hot demand right now by every TV network if she will return there. Otherwise, expect to see her pick up the film career she was starting before she married Tom Cruise.

Writers Guild East: Lena Dunham, Off Color Jokes, and a Nora Ephron Tribute

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PAULA SCHWARTZ reports from New York: “This is such a low profile event,” Mike Birbiglia said Sunday night of the Writers Guild Awards, “I’m not sure it’s even happening.”

The WGAs’ picks for best original and best adapted screenplays are also harbingers of golden statuettes, so Oscar prognosticators pay attention. Last year the WGA’s awarded “Midnight in Paris” by Woody Allen, and “The Descendants” by Alexander Payne, Nat Faxon and Jim Rash as their choices for best adapted and original screenplays respectively, and both went on to win Oscars.

Last night at the WGAs the big winner was “Argo” for adapted screenplay. Richard Kind, who has a cameo in “Argo,” accepted the award on behalf of screenwriter Chris Terrio. “It’s a special movie that honors America, Hollywood. It’s taut. It’s beautifully directed,” Kind said of the Ben Affleck CIA hostage thriller, which is now the Oscar frontrunner.

The other big prize went to Mark Boal for his original screenplay for Kathryn Bigelow’s “Zero Dark Thirty.” The win was a surprise; the Osama bin Laden thriller had fallen off of the Oscar bandwagon since all the torture controversy, but has now gotten a new boost. (Boal received a WGA award in 2010 for best original screenplay for Bigelow’s “The Hurt Locker,” and he later went on to win the Oscar.)

The WGAs, since their inception in 1949, have honored writing for film, television, and radio annually and in more recent years they’ve added the categories of new media and video games.

Held simultaneously in New York and Los Angeles, they are the only awards show that celebrates the achievements of writers.

The Writers Guild Awards are not televised. The writers typically vent amusingly about their lonely and underpaid professions and how they’re struggling to find their next gig. The event is light on food, but there’s plenty of booze, so guests get really drunk. The winners and presenters also drop F-bombs, tell raunchy jokes and trade insults, so that the WGAs resemble a celebrity roast as much as an awards show.

Actor Richard Kind hosted the New York event at B.B. King’s, a run down club in Times Square. Guests included Gina Gershon, Louis C.K, Lucy Alibar, Bobby Cannavale, insult comic Lisa Lampanelli, Fred Armisen, Mike Birbiglia, John McLaughlin (“Black Swan”), and Terry George (“Hotel Rwanda”).

“Castle” star Nathan Fillion hosted the Los Angeles counterpart at the JW Marriott, a five-star hotel, with high-profile celebrity wattage Jessica Chastain, Julie Bowen, Jane Lynch, Steven Spielberg, James Gandolfini, Francis Ford Coppola, Amy Poehler and Tobey Maguire.

But New York had “Girls” creator Lena Dunham, who was the center of attention. “Girls” also received a WGA for best new series. Dunham’s show – with writers Judd Apatow, Lesley Arfin, Dunham, Sarah Heyward, Bruce Eric Kaplan, Jenni Konner, Deborah Schoeneman and Dan Sterling – beat “The Mindy Project,” “Nashville,” “The Newsroom” and “Veep.”

Dunham, whose back is covered with tattoos, has learned how to pose for the photographers; on the red carpet she jutted out her hip and lowered her chin seductively. Her hair’s in a pixie haircut, and she wore a strapless black-and-white animal print dress and strappy stilettos and looked nothing like her “Girls” character Hannah.

Jonathan Ames, who presented the award to Dunham, chugged from an “I Love New York “coffee mug, which he claimed was “loaded with vodka and club soda.” As he did last year, he whined about the cancellation of his HBO show, “Bored to Death.” “A terrible title right from the start,” he lamented. For more than 20 minutes, the self-absorbed writer riffed on everything from pubic hair to his youthful stint in rehab.

By the time he got around to giving Dunham the new series award, she joked, “I’m so anxious accepting this award, from you particularly.”

She went on to say, “There are a lot of parts of the television making process that interests me, but it all comes from writing for me, and I feel it’s such a gift to do this as a job. It’s a gift to be in a room with so many people I admire.”

Dunham also told a hysterical story about meeting Lisa Lampanelli. “I spent New Year’s Eve when I was 15 watching Lisa Lampanelli at Caroline’s Comedy Club with my mother,” Dunham said. “And we went up to her afterwards, and my mother said, ‘She wants to be you,'” and “Lisa went, ‘What? A c…t.”

Later Ames presented Louis C.K. with the best comedy series award for “Louie,” which bested Dunham’s “Girls,” along with “30 Rock,” “Modern Family” and “Parks and Recreation.” Before he gave his acceptance speech, Louis C.K. told Ames, “Please, just shut up.” He added, “I still regret coming here.”

Louis C.K. praised his co-writers Pamela Adlon and Vernon Chatman, who joined him on stage, “I say I do everything on my own but I really don’t. I take all the money and the credit,” but “they come up with beautiful ideas.”

The WGA documentary prize went to the Sony Pictures Classics movie “Searching for Sugar Man,” by Malik Bendjellou. The feel-good doc about singer-songwriter Rodriguez, a rock icon to South Africans, is a lock for an Oscar.

The WGA East coast also honored Nora Ephron with a tribute given by writer Meg Wolitzer, who spoke of Ephron’s friendship and support of young women writers. She also quoted some of Ephron’s witty observations: “If pregnancy were a book, they would cut off the last two chapters.” Also, “When your children are teenagers, it’s important to have a dog so that somebody in the house is happy to see you.”

Other winners included the writing for “Breaking Bad” (Drama Series), “Hatfields & McCoys,” Nights Two and Three (Long form – original) and “Game Change” (Long form-adapted)

The Writers Guild of America, East, present special honors to David Koepp (“Jurassic Park”) – Ian McClellan Hunter Award for Career Achievement in Writing, and Bob Schneider – Richard E. Jablow Award for devoted service to the Guild.

Writers Guild West Ceremony Host: “Producers can sure be d—s, right?”

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LEAH SYDNEY reports from the West Coast Writers Guild awards ceremony: Cleverness, graciousness and wit were the orders of the night at the WGA West Awards. Writers are a supportive bunch and all were touting each other’s work. Before the ceremony began, David O. Russell was the toast of the night.  It seemed like everyone was telling him how much they love “Silver Linings.”  Gracious David was chatting with all.   “Lincoln” screenwriter Tony Kushner went over to Mindy Kaling to tell her how much he loved her show, ‘The Mindy Project.”

Jessica Chastain joined in.  Jessica told me she’s finally catching up on some rest now that her Broadway stint in ‘The Heiress’ is over.  Jackie Weaver told honoree Phil Rosenthal that it’s still her and her husband’s favorite show.  Jackie told me that her husband, who is also an actor, can’t make it to the Academy Awards because he’s working. Mark Boal and Kathryn Bigelow–the “Zero Dark Thirty” pair– were very much together. Mark told me that he tries to remain even-keeled about it all.  “It is what it is,” he said.

The ceremony began with host Nathan Fillion of TV’s “Castle” remarking,” We can all agree on one thing, that Producers can sure be dicks…right? ”

When the best daytime drama was announced, (Young and Restless later won) ‘serious’ clips of the soaps were shown cracking up the crowd.

The mood shifted when Steven Spielberg gave the Paul Selvin Award to Tony Kushner.  Steven remarked, “Nothing gives a filmmaker more security than having a writer by your side.  Tony’s background is in theater, I got notes from him every half hour.  His love for the great American experiment is unlike I’ve ever seen.  One of the greatest values of Democracy is to speak up for the marginalized.  Tony gives them a voice.  I believe Tony got to know Lincoln in a profound way.”

Tony countered by calling Steven, “a monumental mensch.”  Tony also commented that, “it was great knowing I was going to get this.  It took some of the edge off.”

The famed playwright Tom Stoppard received the Laurel Award for Screen.  Tom’s wish list of the two lines he had written? Tom says, “I’m not a great screenwriter, I’m a bit talkative,” Tom then went on, “I would have given so much to have written that line when Tommy Lee Jones says to Harrison Ford in ‘The Fugitive,’ I don’t care.”  The other line is when Bill Murray in ‘Ghostbusters,’ zapped the Amazonian deity and said, ‘That chick is toast.”

Phil Rosenthal, who received the Valentine Davies Award from Brad Garrett, whom Phil called “my favorite oversized Hebrew.” Phil got the biggest laughs of the night.  Phil then went on to say, “if you’re lucky enough to do well in life, it’s your obligation to help those around you,” which got the biggest applause of the night.  Not to be too serious, Phil ended his funny speech with, “thanks to the WGA West, not the East, they’re assholes.”

Chris Terrio (“Argo”) won and honestly recounted how when he started to write the script in 2008, “I was broke, I couldn’t pay my rent, I defaulted on my student loans.”  Chris later went on to thank Ben Affleck, “Ben told me he’s watching on the internet.  He’s a kind, good man.”

Mark Boal later won and thanked Kathyrn Bigelow profusely, “She took this script and made it live and fly. “

Oscar Show Adds More Fire Power: Neeson, Travolta, Hayek, Melissa McCarthy

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The Oscars are this Sunday on ABC. Producers keep adding more fire power, with A list stars joining the presenters line up in droves. This morning Liam Neeson, John Travolta, Salma Hayek, and Melissa McCarthy are all announced. They’re all past nominees. And a couple of huge A listers who once starred in a very big blockbuster–each Oscar winners themselves for Best Actor and Actress– will be announced shortly to present together. And here’s today’s announcement:

Hayek Pinault, McCarthy, Neeson and Travolta join a stellar list of previously announced Oscar presenters including Ben Affleck, Jessica Chastain, Jennifer Lawrence, Halle Berry, Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Mark Wahlberg, Ted and “Marvel’s The Avengers” cast members Robert Downey Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, Chris Evans, Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo; returning 2011 Oscar winners Jean Dujardin, Christopher Plummer, Octavia Spencer and Meryl Streep; “Chicago” cast members Richard Gere, Queen Latifah, Renée Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones; special guests Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Daniel Radcliffe, Channing Tatum and Charlize Theron; and performers Adele, Dame Shirley Bassey, Norah Jones and Barbra Streisand.

PS With “Downton Abbey” done for the season, and “Homeland” nowhere in sight, the Oscar show–with just tons of stars–is destined to be a huge ratings getter.

Downton Tragedy: Will Dan Stevens Be George Clooney or David Caruso?

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WITH SPOILERS: By now, most fans of “Downton Abbey” in the US know what the Brits learned on Christmas Day: Matthew Crawley is most sincerely dead. After seeing his newborn son, Matthew died in automobile accident, on camera, blood pouring out of his head. Series creator Julian Fellowes and the producers took out their most decided unhappiness about actor Dan Stevens leaving them after three seasons. Stevens as much as told us this at the Broadway premiere of “The Heiress” when his rude publicist almost tackled me to get him away.

Stevens had been giving interviews saying he’d brought his family to America and was looking forward to sticking around. He’s walked away from the best show on television on two continents and massive popularity. So what now? Will he follow in the footsteps of George Clooney and make a successful transition to movies? Or will Stevens become the British equivalent of David Caruso, who spurned “NYPD Blue” years ago for a movie career that fizzled immediately? It’s hard to say. Remember Clooney stuck with “ER” for several years before making that full time jump. It was Caruso who left “NYPD Blue” right away.

Stevens might very well have stuck it out for two more seasons of “Downton.” After all, the show only produces a handful of episodes per season–it’s not like he was required to make 22 episodes. And he squandered the good will of fans he was courting for future work.

Mary (Michelle Dockery) won’t be alone for along. Fellowes is already casting for a new love interest, not a husband, but an intermediary fellow. And it wouldn’ surprise anyone if the fifth season endgame brings Mary together with her brother-in-law, Tom Branson, the former chauffeur.

Meanwhile, “Downton” ends season three on a high note otherwise. The double episode was of the highest quality, beautifully shot in Scotland. It resolved many plot points and character interactions in case Fellowes wants to make other changes for Season Four. For one thing, Rose will be back–she’s to this series what Georgina (Lesley Anne Down) was to the original “Upstairs Downstairs.” And you might surmise that Jimmy, the footman, may be gone as his purpose has been fulfilled. The addition of Charles Edwards as Edith’s complicated suitor is perfect, though.

“Downton” advanced one year with this double episode–it may be 1922 or 1923 when the return. It will be the Roaring Twenties, the Jazz Age, Paris in the 20s– lots of material for Fellowes to have fun with. Let’s hope it doesn’t get too modern. Just as Branson once told Sybil he had “mitral valve prolapse” long before it was invented, tonight he offered a few other modern idea–like a “learning curve”– that wasn’t really introduced into the mainstream language until the 1930s. But that’s Branson– always ahead of his time.