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Jessica Brown-Findlay (born as Jessica Rose Brown-Findlay on 14th September 1989; Cookham, England) is the English actress who played Sybil Branson in ITV's Downton Abbey.

Biography[]

When Jessica Brown Findlay was a little girl, she dreamt of being a famous ballerina and for a time her dreams looked like they were going to come true. From the moment she saw her nursery classmate in a leotard and ballet pumps, she was desperate to be part of that world and ever determined. At the age of eight, she sat her parents down and told them that she would be a professional ballerina one day. After years of training with the National Youth Ballet and the Associates of the Royal Ballet, she was asked at the age of 15 to dance with the Kirov at the Royal Opera House in London for a summer season. Jessica attended Furze Platt Senior School in Maidenhead. At the end of her GCSEs, Brown-Findlay was accepted to a number of ballet schools, but chose to go to the Arts Educational School, because of the A-level courses it provided and its pastoral care. She said, “Dancing with the Kirov was incredible and at the end of year 11, I was accepted to a couple of ballet schools, but chose to go to the Arts Education School, because it did A-levels, and you were well looked after. It was like Hogwarts for ballet! So I trained there for two years, but in my final year I had three operations on my ankles and the last one went wrong. When I woke up I was told that I couldn’t dance anymore. It was heartbreaking, because I had done all that training and my body was saying no I’m not going to let you.”

Jessica’s determination and spirit could not be dampened for long, and she was soon looking around for new challenges to embrace. “I was quite angry for a long while after that but my art teacher thought I was talented and encouraged me to apply to do Fine Art at St Martin’s, which I did,” she explains. Once there, Jessica happened upon acting and then began attending classes herself. What happened after that surprised Jessica more than anyone. Having been seen by a couple of casting agents, she landed the lead role as Emelia in the soon to be released film Albatross, directed by Niall MacCormick opposite Hollywood actress Julia Ormond. She was subsequently cast in an episode of the E4 programme Misfits and in Downton Abbey. Her second television role is playing Lady Sybil Crawley, youngest daughter of Lord Grantham, played by Hugh Bonneville and grand-daughter of Violet, Dowager Countess played by Maggie Smith. Not only that, but she has been tipped in Screen International as ‘the new Keira Knightley’ and named in Vanity Fair as “a new talent to watch”.

“The casting process was ridiculously short for me,” she explains. “I read it and called my agent right away and said, ‘please can I read for this, I absolutely adore it. I came out of the reading really happy, which is a good sign and I got a phone call about a week later offering me the part.” The read-through for any show can be a daunting process, as it is often the first time the cast meet each other and get a real sense of the script. But when you are sharing a table with Maggie Smith, Elizabeth McGovern, Jim Carter, and Hugh Bonneville, for a young actress, that process is even more daunting. “It was fun in the end, but I had the most incredible butterflies. It took a while to relax into it, but it was great to meet everyone before we got to set.”

Downton Abbey is set in 1912-1914 and women aren’t yet allowed to have the vote. The gender differences were obvious and women were expected to take a back seat when it came to politics and voicing their opinions.

Lady Sybil, Jessica explains, is “very forward thinking, she’s at that age where she’s learning who she is and consequently she’s discovering this at a time when women were becoming more vocal and less subservient”.

The Downton Abbey estate is at the heart of the community where the Crawley family preside over their world and the servants are there to make sure everything runs smoothly. Lady Sybil sees a kindred spirit in housemaid Gwen (played by Rose Leslie), and realising that Gwen wants to break free of a life in service Sybil makes it her business to help her find a job outside of the estate. This leads to all sorts of trouble and danger for Sybil with more on the way when a new socialist chauffeur joins the staff in episode four. “She hears through the grapevine that Gwen has aspirations to better herself and break out of service,” says Jessica. “Sybil jumps through hoops to make sure Gwen gets to her job interviews – there’s a real closeness between these two characters and when Branson the chauffeur joins the staff later on in the series, we see even more class barriers begin to break down.”

With a core cast of 18 actors it is inevitable that there would be a lot of laughter on set and seemingly often at the heart of that laughter is Maggie Smith. “Maggie’s sense of humour is so dry and quick – she’ll just pass by you and out pops a quip that makes you cry with laughter – she is so much fun. If I’ve learnt one thing on this job it is to laugh and not take myself too seriously.”

Brown-Findlay will be appearing in "Winter's Tale" opposite Will Smith and Russell Crowe, and in the Channel 4 presentation of "Labyrinth", the Kate Mosse bestselling novel. The actress says that she loves London and will not live in Hollywood. She told the Daily Mail that her ambition is to write, while operating a tea and sandwich shop.

To help her study for the role of a World War I nurse, she read the diary of her grandmother who was a nurse in WWII.[1]

She starred in Black Mirror, as did Tom Cullen and Tuppence Middleton.

Behind the scenes[]

  • Jessica Brown-Findlay, actor Allen Leech (who plays Tom Branson), and Downton Abbey writer and creator Julian Fellowes talked about Branson and Lady Sybil's relationship on the Downton Abbey Series 2 DVD special feature "Romance In A Time Of Warfare."
    • Brown-Findlay: The connection she has with Branson is beautiful. In the first series, I never saw it. I never saw it sort of being romantic or anything like that. I never read it as that. She's just so happy for there to be someone she could talk to, and understand her. Their relationship's really interesting because he tells her everything. How he feels about her really, and then he understands that then that freaks her out. At a point, I think when Sybil is leaving home, she's gonna be living away for two months, just sort thinking "You're doing this now? You've had two years!"
    • Leech: The war changes so much of how people view the aristocracy. And... and, so everything is there to play for then. So he just keeps trying to push her to kind of see if she'll come round to his way of thinking. Obviously, if you've seen Jessica Brown-Findlay, it's not hard to play opposite her, in fairness, you know? Looking like you want to kiss her is kind of like, "Well, granted, that's not hard, it's you!"

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