Hugh Bonneville nel ruolo di...
Robert Crawley
- Lady Mary Talbot: What are you up to, granny?
- Violet Crawley: Well, ideally, I would like Maud to see your father as the son she never had.
- Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham: Will she be the mother I never had?
- Violet Crawley: Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit.
- Robert Crawley, Earl of Grantham: No maid, no valet, no nanny, even!
- Bertie Hexham: It's 1927. We're modern folk.
- Robert Crawley: Good night, Mama. Remember to pray for us. Mainly, for better weather.
- Violet Crawley: I'll put in a word.
- Bertie Hexham: How could you know that and how could you prove it?
- Violet Crawley: We find a friendly judge.
- Robert Crawley: Friendly or corrupt?
- Violet Crawley: Whichever does the trick.
- Robert Crawley: Carson, what happened to the royal servants last night?
- Mr Carson: Hard to say, milord. They sort of - gave up the ghost.
- Robert Crawley: Well, you managed splendidly. Although, I could have done without Molseley's aria. Please thank the staff for saving the day.
- Robert Crawley: Are you excited?
- Cora Crawley: I am a bit. Are you?
- Robert Crawley: Would it be common to admit it?
- Cora Crawley: Not to an American.
- Robert Crawley: Are you here for dinner, Mama? It's a buffet.
- Violet Crawley: Well, I'm not changed.
- Lady Edith: We won't change either. So, you just need to take off your hat.
- Violet Crawley: You talk as if that were easy.
- Thomas Barrow: I don't quite understand where it leaves me.
- Robert Crawley: Well, you can be a sort of...
- Thomas Barrow: With your permission, I'd prefer not to be a "sort of" anything, milord.
- Robert Crawley: Is there any chance Henry might be back?
- Lady Mary: Well, I doubt it. I'll send a telegram. But, there's a motor show in Chicago that I know he cannot chuck.