Fashion
Separating Fact From Fiction in The Gilded Age

Separating Fact From Fiction in The Gilded Age

Money isn’t everything in The Gilded Age, Julian Fellowes’s lavish costume drama depicting life among the upper crust—and their servants—in late-19th-century New York City. Yes, nouveau riche railroad magnate George Russell (Morgan Spector) and his social-climbing wife, Bertha (Carrie Coon), have scads of it—ostentatiously displayed in their new Stanford White–designed Fifth Avenue mansion filled with European heirlooms. But what Bertha, a potato digger’s daughter, really wants is status—to secure her family’s place among the city’s old money elite. Fellowes’s latest foray into historical fiction was originally intended to be a fact-based account of shipping and railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt, he… Read Full Article