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Downton Abbey returns to PBS Sunday night at 9: Watch for duelling dowagers

Tonight brings the moment Downton Abbey fans have been waiting for — the première of Season 3 on PBS.
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This undated publicity photo provided by PBS shows Maggie Smith as the Dowager Countess, left, and Shirley MacLaine as Martha Levinson from the TV series, "Downton Abbey." The third season premiere airs in the U.S. on Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013 on PBS. (AP Photo/PBS, Carnival Film & Television Limited 2012 for MASTERPIECE, Nick Briggs)

Tonight brings the moment Downton Abbey fans have been waiting for — the première of Season 3 on PBS.

Julian Fellowes, Downton Abbey’s creator and writer, has provided plenty of reasons to tune in to the British-made series, which begins tonight at 9.

Highlights include:

• Shirley MacLaine as an American visitor, talking smack with British in-law Violet (Maggie Smith), each wittily knocking the other’s nation and values. Mac-Laine wears pasty, kabuki-like makeup as armour; Smith meets insults with world-weary eyes.

• Michelle Dockery keeping it real as Lady Mary, who finally loves Matthew (Dan Stevens) while barely softening her sharp edges and steely devotion to family tradition. Bonus: The willowy actress was born to wear sleek 1920s dresses.

• Stevens as golden-boy Matthew Crawley is still conflicted about his future role as lord of the manor. A side game: See if Stevens, smart as he is, looks distracted by the novels he was reading on the set as a judge for Britain’s Man Booker Prize.

• Fellows’ charming faith in the tender side of revolutionaries, at least ones that mate with landed gentry. Irish chauffeur-turned-activist Tom Branson (Allen Leech), who previously turned moist-eyed over the murder of the Russian royal family, loses it again in this season over fiery political warfare.

• Fashion and its evolution, as Downton’s upstairs ladies move from lovely but fussy wardrobes to sassier, clean-lined garb and (except for steadfast Mary) shorter hair, reflections of liberating changes that include the promise of universal suffrage — that means the vote — for all British women.

• Cultural, medical and other period tidbits, which are fascinating and a reminder that wise historians never would choose to live in a time before their own. In one instance, a character who may have cancer is told that test results will take weeks.

Sunday, 9 p.m., PBS