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Julie Gerstenblatt

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Lessons From 'Downton Abbey': A Jewish American Princess Studies the Dowager Countess

Posted: 02/15/2012 3:37 pm

I admire the British for so many reasons. They have a rich history of beheading enemies of the monarchy without ever compromising afternoon tea. They colonized half the globe and yet managed to ensure that no other colony's accent would sound exactly like theirs. In particular, I idolize the Brits for their fictional characters. If shipwrecked on a deserted island and in need of reading materials to last a lifetime, I'd much rather have aristocratic and feisty Emma Woodhouse and her charming Mr. Knightly with me than puritanical Hester Prynne and her pastor, Arthur (yawn) Dimmesdale. Give me Heathcliff and Catherine! Bring me my Bridget Jones! Oh, heck, just give me any book that was later turned into a movie starring Hugh Grant and/or Colin Firth! And, now, thanks to Downton Abbey, make sure that I always have the BBC on my telly. (Yes, even on that deserted island.)

Turns out, there's a lot a Jewish girl from New York can learn from the fictional, Victorian-era Crawleys and their estate in North Yorkshire. In honor of the upcoming finale of Downton Abbey's second season, I'd like to share some of these delicious bits of knowledge.

1. Marry your cousin.
Clock ticking? Desperate for a mate? Tired of being set up by your mom's gay hairdresser? Sick of having half of your grandmother's mahjong group insist they have the perfect guy for a "mature" woman like yourself? Dear Jewess, don't fret. The next time your dad worries about who will take over his condo in Boca once he passes on, ensure him that you've got his back. Promptly fall in love with your cousin and gain an immediate heir to the estate. Now, don't go screwing things up by, let's say, screwing a Turk who then dies in your bed or by pretending you don't love your cousin when you really, really do. Don't let the cousin go off to war on Wall Street without telling him how you feel. Worry later about the genetic complications this might prompt, including blood-clotting disorders; for now, stay focused on Boca.

2. Just shut up already.
When people ask me how I am doing, I actually tell them. Sometimes, I go on for several minutes, blabbing and spewing and confiding, analyzing and hypothesizing and then circling back to the original point with some sort of diarrhea of the mouth. What can I say? This is nearly unavoidable when the double helix of your DNA looks like Fran Drescher and Woody Allen snake dancing. An English Lady would never behave like that. She would hold her tongue and smile in mixed company, only divulging her true feelings to her maid. Even if she were bleeding internally during cocktails, I like to think she'd keep concerns about her spleen to herself. Perhaps if I wore a corset, I'd feel less like talking, and therefore, become all the more charming. I'd certainly look better. It's worth a shot.

3. Use your father's influence for your own gain.
Oh, wait. We Jewish American Princesses have already got this one down. Check it off the list!

Interestingly, gossip about season 3 of Downton Abbey has some suspecting that Cora Crawley, wife of the Earl of Grantham and daughter of American dry goods multimillionaire Isidore Levinson, is actually... gasp... Jewish. With a name like Levinson, it's certainly possible. And it would help to explain the overlapping behaviors between Jewesses and Countesses, at least in this instance.

4. When and if that doesn't work, sneak around behind Papa's back.
This is really fun. There is no telling what can be done once dear old Papa is out of the loop. This is how most of my shopping at Bergdorf Goodman was done when I was in high school. Afterwards, I would hide the packages so my dad couldn't document the trouble my mom and I got into with his Amex. But now I see that this was nothing. When done with the English flair of a Crawley, you can achieve true greatness behind your father's back. You can fall for your politically-minded chauffeur and still have time to dress wounds back at the makeshift convalescent hospital set up in your family's dining room. You can, with help from your mother and her maid, remove the dead Turk from your bedroom and place him back in his own bedchamber. You can then work a romantic deal with a well-known publisher, exchanging your heart for the safety of your public reputation. Shhh. As long as Papa doesn't know, then you are not a whore, or a slut, or in fear of being disinherited, disowned, or dishonored. There shall be no dissing whatsoever without Daddy's knowledge. (Easier by far just to go on a shopping spree, if you ask me.)

5. In a tiered society, it's best to be at the tippy top or the briny bottom.
Honestly, the servants and the Dowager Countess seem to have the most fun in and around Downton. There is much to scheme about when you spend all day mending fancy people's socks and cleaning their underclothes, which explains why O'Brien and Thomas are so delightfully awful. Same with Maggie Smith's Dowager Countess, the most influential of the upstairs bunch. Once she properly positions an off-kilter, feathered and flowered hat atop her curls, she's got nothing to do all day but gossip and connive and dream up the next sharp barb. And that's the way life should be as the top 1%. It's not as much fun being stuck somewhere in the middle, like me, and like dear Bates. He's got some money, but he's also got a limp and had a wife who was a bitch. No one wants to be him. And then there's Isobel Crawley, who has so little power next to Lady Grantham that she had to retreat to France for a while. She's no fun at all.

When all is said and done, in my next life, I'd like to come back as a British duchess or countess or heiress. Any -ess will do. I'd like to have someone dress me for dinner and I'd want to learn how to ride a horse in the countryside without having to worry about my hay fever.

Oh, and one last thing. I'd like to celebrate Christmas, even if it is fictional and during wartime. Lucky for me, that's exactly what the Crawleys will be doing this Sunday, February 19th. Now, raise your heirloom quality, cut-glass crystal goblet and follow my lead. Cheers, everyone.

 
I admire the British for so many reasons. They have a rich history of beheading enemies of the monarchy without ever compromising afternoon tea. They colonized half the globe and yet managed to ensu...
I admire the British for so many reasons. They have a rich history of beheading enemies of the monarchy without ever compromising afternoon tea. They colonized half the globe and yet managed to ensu...
 
 
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WillCooney
Democrat dagnabit! Now leave me alone!
10:26 AM on 02/17/2012
I am addicted to "Downton Abbey". An avowed Anglophile, I don't know what I'd do without the BBC. Next up, the new Sherlock Holmes with the scrumptious Benedict Cumberbatch!!!
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10:29 PM on 02/16/2012
A question:

did they ever explain how far removed are cousins Mary and Matthew?
12:31 PM on 02/17/2012
Third cousins, I think.
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10:25 PM on 02/16/2012
I too love Downton Abbey, but I confess to being unable to explain why. Something about trees and forests, perhaps?

I read that Shirley Maclaine is coming in next season as Cora's mother. I can hardly wait to find out how the two dowagers (does America even have dowagers?) bounce off one another.

If I had my druthers, this show would be on for two hours (minimum) every week, 52 weeks a year. No vacations or sick time for these good folks! Our salacious entertainment requirements are much more important than their mere physical needs.
03:51 PM on 02/16/2012
"... in my next life, I'd like to come back as a British duchess or countess or heiress. Any -ess will do."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReadMyLipstick1
It can't be that hard.
12:59 PM on 02/16/2012
I love the article, Ms. Gerstenblatt! My favorite rule for the J.A.P.'s, is no. 3. I live with that before me on a daily basis, and if the behavior weren't so ridiculously funny (and ridiculous!), one might contemplate some sort of retalliation! I totally enjoy Downton Abbey and am looking forward to Shirley Maclain joing the cast for Season III.
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blastocyst
Happy to be here
11:44 AM on 02/16/2012
Some of these stressed points of Julie's, pertaining to the 'intrigue' which pervades when a patriarch or a matriarch passes-on, aren't that far fetched. Often, attempts to dramatize the situation are unnecessary.
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Matt Blanc
10:56 AM on 02/16/2012
This post reminds me of a story told by a former co-worker. She said that, growing up, her heart was set on marrying Prince Charles. She followed all of the royal news, and couldn't wait to go to England (from Maryland, USA) to meet him somehow. When his engagement to Diana was announced she actually cried, her fantasy was so real to her. Finally her mother sat her down and said, 'enough. Look, even if you met him, you couldn't marry him -- we're Jewish!'
09:02 PM on 02/16/2012
Love it!!!!
09:30 AM on 02/16/2012
i think southern baptist girls can learn alot, too.
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
08:37 AM on 02/16/2012
aye, the grass is always greener, what what.
i served noodle kugel at my xmas day dinner.
08:31 AM on 02/16/2012
I predict the most wasp-y of the group (Edith) will come out the best!!! She's totally non-princess and v. quiet. I watch and wait for my chance to say "Ha"!
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philhellene
Far Left and Proud of It!
10:01 AM on 02/16/2012
Predictions:

Mary will stay with the grasping newspaper owner and Mary, the plain-looking and abused middle child, will marry the heir.
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forkuu
terrible typist-no patience- no political party
02:28 PM on 02/16/2012
i dont know if mary will stay the newspaper guy but i agree that the middle child will marry the rightful heir the soldier who she took care of.. and left
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Rimser
07:57 AM on 02/16/2012
Anybody know if there's any truth to the rumor that Shirley Maclaine puts in an appearance as Lady Grantham's mother in season 3?
08:31 AM on 02/16/2012
Yup, Google it. They started filming Series 3 a couple days ago.
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
08:37 AM on 02/16/2012
read that too
nancynancy
Atheist.
07:39 AM on 02/16/2012
Very funny article!
06:10 AM on 02/16/2012
I agree. Maggie Smith is as sublime in Downton as she has ever been. Who says there are no good parts for women?
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forkuu
terrible typist-no patience- no political party
02:29 PM on 02/16/2012
madame smith steals the show i think her one liners are so funny.
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StaircaseCO
My micro bio is very empty
12:31 AM on 02/16/2012
Maggie Smith's performance as the dowager just kills me. She speaks and I laugh my tail off at her removal from and ignorance of the lower classes, her stunning candor and cunning political skills. She has always been an incredible actress and is at her very best on this program.
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TheMediaRanger
Pull over, buddy, let's see your poetic license
12:24 AM on 02/16/2012
I'm a 59-year-old male goyem, and I see the connection. Don't the you're asking too much at all, Ms. Genrstenblatt. Not a-toll.