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The Gilded Age portrays the Black elite of 1880s New York City in a way never before seen on TV, and Season 3 has allowed the ...
Alva Belmont was a prominent Gilded Age socialite who married a Vanderbilt railroad heir. Later in life, she became a women's ...
Designer Rob Johansen’s restoration of the 1899 home in Manhattan’s Upper East Side is a lesson in “time-hopping” ...
During the lead up to The Gilded Age Season 2’s release on HBO, co-showrunners Julian Fellowes and Sonja Warfield were ...
John Singer Sargent is a minor character in the third season of HBO's "The Gilded Age"—but he was the major high society ...
Architect Stanford White and artist Augustus Saint-Gaudens were friends, collaborators, and perhaps even more. Their ...
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." It has been two years since ...
Last season marked the appearances of actual real people like Oscar Wilde, Booker T. Washington, and Emily Roebling, and this season we get our first hit of “person who actually existed and is ...
Bertha Russell (Carrie Coon) was the clear victor of the Opera Wars that dominated the second season of The Gilded Age. The ...
And George isn’t sharing what is going on with his business and the risks he’s taking to build it. He could lose everything, but she doesn’t know that. Bertha is very confident in her position.
The Gilded Age has long sprinkled real-life figures amid the fictitious, from regular characters like Caroline Astor (Donna Murphy) and Mrs. Fish to Oscar Wilde and Booker T. Washington.
The Gilded Age is about to sweep viewers off their feet and transport them back to the glitz and glamour of 19th century New York City. Old and new money continue to clash in this opulent drama.