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Dan Stevens: Killing off Downton Abbey's Matthew on Christmas Day was not my doing

 

Sherna Noah
Tuesday 04 June 2013 10:13 BST
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Class acts: stars of 'Downton Abbey' on the set, Dan Stevens and Hugh Bonneville
Class acts: stars of 'Downton Abbey' on the set, Dan Stevens and Hugh Bonneville (NICK BRIGGS)

Former Downton Abbey star Dan Stevens has insisted that he had no say in his character's controversial death in the ITV period drama.

Matthew Crawley was killed off at Christmas in a car crash, in an exit that shocked millions of viewers.

Stevens, who had already made the decision to leave the drama, told the Radio Times: "I am sorry about that! I think what emerged is that it's an unwritten rule that you're not supposed to die on British television on Christmas Day, and that, specifically, was not my doing."

He said of the costume drama, created by Julian Fellowes: "We didn't see that script until the very last minute, so we didn't know exactly how they were going to do it.

"There was a bit of a sweepstake going on and all sorts of speculation like, would he be gored by a stag in the Highlands? Or was some masonry going to fall from a parapet and hit him on the head?"

Stevens, who recently enjoyed a spell on Broadway in The Heiress, said: "I didn't have any say in the manner in which he went. Ultimately, it was in the hands of Julian and the producers."

But he added: "It was right that he didn't run off and have an affair with somebody. I don't think that would have been right for Matthew as a character."

Stevens will be appearing later this month in the film Summer In February, a romance set in Edwardian England.

He told the magazine that his character in the film might bear a resemblance to Matthew Crawley.

"For the last part of filming Summer in February I was actually filming Downton too," he said. "There was an overlap and, as a result, Gilbert Evans ended up looking curiously similar to a certain Matthew Crawley, because the hair and everything else had to match."

PA

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