The Lord of the Manor will see you now...

Downton Abbey has made Hugh Bonneville one of the world's best-known aristocrats. But, as he tells Susan Griffin, nothing could prepare him for playing opposite a certain Peruvian bear
It’s been a busy year for Hugh Bonneville. He reprised his role as the bumbling boss Ian Fletcher in W1A, a BBC spin-off from the awardwinning Olympics mockumentary Twenty Twelve, starred alongside George Clooney in the Second World War film The Monuments Men and wrapped up series five of Downton Abbey.

‘There isn’t a lot of time off at the moment, but I’m not complaining. I love the fact there’s that variety,’ says the 50-year-old.

‘Monuments Men, goodness me, it was all down to Downton Abbey, I’m sure… I was fantastically nervous working with these great icons of the screen – some of my heroes, like Bill Murray and John Goodman, wonderful people. Of course, as soon as you get on set with them, you realise they’re just actors who want to do a good job too.’

Bonneville has been working for more than 20 years now, popping up as lovable buffoons in romcom Notting Hill and period adaptation Mansfield Park, but it’s Downton and his role as patriarch Lord Grantham that’s made him a household name – and recognisable to millions of TV fans around the world.

As Downton fans will know, Lord Grantham, unable to fully comprehend how much the world has changed following the First World War, is still coming to terms with the fast-paced life of the 1920s.

‘I think he’s felt like a fish out of water, wanting to revert to the way things were before the war,’ says London-born Bonneville. ‘He’s been dragging his heels, being a bit of a dinosaur and reluctant to change because he didn’t know which direction to go in.’

But as the series progresses, he believes his alter ego begins to warm to the idea of progression. ‘He is a conservative by birth and tradition and all that, but he was very forward-thinking in series one, and that’s the Robert [Crawley, Lord Grantham] I fell in love with,’ reveals the actor. ‘I was aware of him making some odd decisions in series three and four, but he’s set to get some strong views about the future in a good, modernising way, so I’m rooting for him. He’s bouncing back.’

But what of his relationship with wife Cora, played by Elizabeth McGovern? Downton’s golden couple has been drifting apart of late and the arrival of Richard E Grant’s suave art historian Simon Bricker hasn’t helped matters.

‘The important thing [in a marriage] is not to get stuck in a rut and, as we see in the series, taking each other for granted can be a dangerous thing, especially when there are art historians coming over the horizon,’ laughs Bonneville, who has a 12-yearold son, Felix, with his wife Lulu.

He jokes that he and the rest of the cast were ‘like a pool of sharks with a fresh bit of meat’ when Grant arrived on set. ‘He’s such a hoot,’ adds Bonneville, before recalling spotting the Withnail & I star sniffing the walls and table on set. ‘He explained that since he was a child, he’s had a very sensitive nose and loves to smell stuff . About two years ago, someone saw him with his head in a bush of flowers and suggested he should do something about it, so he concocted a perfume that I’m now a proud owner of.’

Hugh-Oct17-01-590

Viewers will be warmed to hear that, unlike last year, the upcoming Christmas special will be set during the festive period, with ‘a chunk of’ scenes having been shot at Alnwick Castle in Northumberland.

‘Highclere [Castle, where Downton is usually shot] is stunning to film in but frankly, Alnwick Castle is huge. That was the highlight of the year,’ says Bonneville. ‘Harry Potter fi lmed exteriors there, but I believe it’s the fi rst time cameras have been allowed inside. The Duke and Duchess of Northumberland are huge fans, which is why they let us in.’

One of the men behind Harry Potter, the producer David Heyman, is behind Bonneville’s forthcoming project – the much-anticipated movie Paddington. ‘It was the script as always,’ says the actor, on what drew him to the role of Mr Brown.

‘I was nervous when I picked it up, because I didn’t want my childhood being messed with, and my memories of this adorable creature. Paddington’s such a vivid character for so many people of a certain generation, but within a page, I was laughing out loud and reminded of the charming innocence and warmth [the author] Michael Bond put on the page. It was a no-brainer to be part of the film.’

There have been many wonderful incarnations over the years, but this is the first time a computer-generated Paddington will mix with actors, including Nicole Kidman and Julie Walters, on screen.

‘It’s wonderful that it’s come to life, but it’s been a painstaking process,’ says Bonneville.

The story, about a young Peruvian bear with a passion for all things British, who winds up on the streets of London before being taken in by the kindly Brown family, was first published in 1958. It was one of the fi rst books Bonneville was introduced to. ‘I had it read to me and then I read it. I remember being enchanted by him and wanted to see all the sights of London with the same wide-eyed enthusiasm,’ he says wistfully.

No doubt he’s keen for his son to see the movie and can only hope it induces more enthusiasm than his Downton set visits.

‘I’ve been filming Downton for six months of the year for five years – that is half of my son’s conscious life,’ says Bonneville. ‘He comes to set and we stay over in a pub down the road and have a boys’ night out. But I have to say, he’s pretty bored with it now.’

Paddington is on general release on 28 November.