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1-50 of 77
- The lives and fortunes of the Bellamy family and their below-stairs servant staff at 165 Eaton Place play out against the social, political and historical backdrop of Edwardian London from 1903 to 1930.
- This spin-off of Upstairs, Downstairs (1971) follows Sarah (parlour-maid) and Thomas (chauffeur) some time after leaving service with the Bellamys.
- Thomas and Sarah go into the service of a depressed and dissipated aristocrat with a death wish, but their good cheer lifts him out of his doldrums.
- Thomas becomes suddenly homesick for his native Wales and with Sarah travels back to his village home for the first time in ten years with dire consequences.
- Nouveau riche Sarah and Thomas have the use of the Andover townhouse, but their egalitarian attitude towards their servants is frowned upon by their butler Wilson.
- James' weekend visit to Somerby Park, with Hudson in tow as his valet, presents an opportunity for both to appreciate their beloved Eaton Place and what they've left behind there.
- Richard's genuine concern for the new house parlormaid has eyebrows raised and tongues wagging.
- Elizabeth's affair with Julius is over, James returns to England with his fiancée, Phyllis, and a major event marks the end of an era.
- The race is on downstairs -- who will marry first upstairs -- Captain James or his father, Richard?
- News of the Titanic disaster arrives at Eaton Place, and the entire household anxiously await word of Lady Marjorie's fate.
- Sarah tells James she's having his baby and the Bellamys make provisions to avoid a major scandal.
- In a gesture of goodwill, the Bellamys offer generous hospitality to a family of Belgian refugees and Edward is feeling increased pressure to enlist.
- While running an ordinary errand, Rose's life takes an extraordinary turn.
- As Britain tries to rebound from the war, James Bellamy runs for political office.
- Elizabeth joins the suffragette movement, but in her effort to protect her, Rose is imprisoned.
- Elizabeth decides not to marry Angus and is captivated by a German-baron visiting England at Christmas.
- In an effort to help the poor in London's East End, James and Elizabeth come face-to-face with a downtrodden Sarah .
- Frederick considers his future when he feels his talents are largely wasted in the Bellamy household.
- James returns to England, with new found vigor and untold wealth, on the eve of the October 1929 stock market crash.
- Everyone's nerves are frazzled when Lord Southwold dies, Lady Southwold and her companion, Miss Hodges, spend a some time with Richard and Lady Marjorie and a valuable diamond brooch goes missing.
- A lonely James has an affair with the very married Lady Newbury.
- Hazel Bellamy assumes her role as mistress of the household with great trepidation and Richard becomes the quarry of a bounty-hunting Austrian woman and her wily and rapacious brother.
- Virginia Hamilton returns to Eaton Place, seeking Richard's advice on an urgent matter.
- Despite their disdain for social conventions, Elizabeth marries Fabian socialist and poet, Lawrence Kirbridge, in a traditional church service and all of its trappings.
- Mrs. Bridges is the envy of every cook in Mayfair and Belgravia when King Edward VII dines at Eaton Place.
- Upstairs, Lady Majorie and friends plan an outing for the servants. However, Downstairs there is romantic intrigue going on between Emily and the next door footman.
- 1971–197551mTV-147.9 (90)TV EpisodeHazel romances a shy pilot with mad abandon, James and Georgina meet in France on the eve of a major military campaign.
- After an evening of dissipated behavior and a reckless drive into the countryside, Georgina must appear at a coroner's inquest, when one of the locals is killed.
- 1971–197551mTV-147.6 (86)TV EpisodeGeorgina and her cohort throw a bacchanal at Eaton Place, with tragic consequences.
- Her sense of duty and loyalty are severely compromised when Lady Marjorie has a passionate affair with a friend of James, with whom she falls deeply in love.
- The strained Kirbridge marriage has yet to be consummated, causing Elizabeth great unhappiness in her quest to make a happy life with Lawrence and her great desire to start a family. As it happens, Lawrence's interests lie elsewhere.
- Their nerves in tatters, Hazel and Richard do all they can to unearth any information about James.
- James is home on leave and offers a realistic account of what is really happening on the front and Daisy and Edward announce their engagement to Hudson.
- Better the devil you know than the one you don't is the lesson Mrs. Bridges and Ruby learn after a terrible row. Upstairs, Lord Stockbridge proposes to Georgina, but there's a catch.
- Elizabeth returns home with her newborn daughter, Lucy, and the very disagreeable and old Nanny Webster, to look after "Baby".
- While James is convalescing, Richard proposes to Mrs. Hamilton, Edward comes home, and Hazel comes down with the Spanish flu as the war draws to an end,
- Alfred, the former Bellamy footman, is on the run and dupes Rose and uses her kindness as a shield from the law.
- Two bachelors pitch the woo to two ladies in the Bellamy household
- The sinking of the Lusitania has Hudson on a tirade and his anti-German fervor pervade the servants hall. Upstairs, Richard is made Civil Lord of the Admiralty in the newly-formed coalition government.
- Hazel's first substantial encounter with fashionable society causes her great humiliation, marital distress and a near-fatal accident, when she and James visit Lord and Lady Newbury at Sommerby Park.
- Sweet pillow talk is very useful to Elizabeth's new lover, wealthy businessman Julius Karekin and Lady Marjorie and Richard are in the throes of losing their beloved Eaton Place.
- Sadly, perhaps inevitably, tragic news arrives for someone at Eaton Place.
- Lady Prudence finally gets hold of the Bellamy drawing room for a worthy cause.
- On the eve of her 21st birthday, Elizabeth is utterly defiant and, consequently, on the brink of a complete breach with her parents.
- 1971–197550mTV-PG7.8 (156)TV EpisodeRichard Bellamy engages an artist to paint a portrait of his beautiful wife, Lady Marjorie.
- Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Kirbridge return from their honeymoon and set up their new household in nearby Greenwich.
- The entire household comes together when a General Strike is called throughout Britain in May 1926
- Elizabeth returns from studying abroad and the household are in a frenzy, preparing for Elizabeth's entrée into London society.
- A tangled web of duplicity is woven when love letters in Lady Marjorie's delicate hand fall into the tawdry hands of a scheming Irishman.
- A downstairs dalliance and a happy outing to a seaside resort divert the staff as war looms on the European continent.