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You are here: Home / Episodes / Episode 1: Welcome to The Gilded Hour / “The Gilded Age” Premier “Never the New”

Episode 1: Welcome to The Gilded Hour / “The Gilded Age” Premier “Never the New”

Episodes, Season 1 · June 13, 2026

Welcome to The Gilded Hour, a podcast about the real-life people, visual culture and history of the 1880s, inspired by each episode of the HBO streaming television series “The Gilded Age.”

This is our first episode, and inspired by the failed soirée of one of the show’s main characters, Bertha Russell, we take a glimpse into the wild, glamorous, and at times unhinged real-life parties that the Gilded Age New York City elite would host to dazzle society, New York, and the world.

Play our episode now, ad-free! (More information about the show below).

About “The Gilded Age” Episode “Never the New”

The episode of “The Gilded Age” that our episode is based on is the premier of this streaming television series, originally airing back in January of 2022. The show’s premier served to introduce audiences to the vast cast of characters and historical realities of Gilded Age (1880s) New York.

This episode begins with two sisters, Agnes van Rhijn and Ada Brook, who are welcoming their niece Marian, a young woman leaving Pennsylvania after her father’s death when she was left with no inheritance. By chance, she meets Peggy Scott, an apparently well-educated young woman who helps her when Marian’s purse and train ticket are stolen. When Peggy can’t make it the rest of the way home to Brooklyn after their long journey, she stays with Agnes and Ada and Marian at their lush home on 61st street. Agnes later offers Peggy a job as her secretary. This causes waves with the van Rhijn house staff, some of whom are not used to working with a black woman.

Meanwhile, a wealthy business owner (and apparent robber baron) George Russell moves into an elaborate, brand-new mansion across the street from the van Rhijn house with his socially ambitious wife Bertha and their young adult children Larry and Gladys. It is clear through several conversations that they are considered “new money” and therefore lesser in status by the established social elite like the van Rhijns. 

Agnes’s son, Oscar, meets Larry Russell at a party hosted by a real life Gilded Age socialite, Mamie Fish. Upon his return to New York, they meet Marian.

Bertha Russell tries to break into high society by hosting a lavish “at home” party; Marian secretly attends, knowing Agnes, who considers Bertha inferior in status to such an extent that she refuses to socialize with her, will disapprove. No one noteworthy shows up from society; especially not the leader of society, Lena Aster. Bertha vows to still prove herself and “make everyone sorry” for excluding her.

What Inspired our Episode?

The show’s episode ends with Bertha Russell’s failed party when no one showed up, serving to teach her just how hard it was to crack into high society.

We wanted to look into what, exactly, Gilded Age parties were all about, and the truth is wilder than anything that has been shown on this television series so far! We chat about the incredible and over-the-top – some would say ostentatious – parties that the society elite would hold.

Sources Consulted

The book “Glitz, Glam and a Damn Good Time” by Jennifer Wright is a great overview of how women like Mamie Fish used parties and social gatherings to further their social power and prestige. For more information: Goodreads link.

“Gilded Age Parties were Even Wilder than you can Imagine” by Renée Rosen

“The Art of a Gilded Age Dinner Party” by Julie Montagu

“The Most Lavish Ball of the Gilded Age” by L.A. History Girl

No LLMs (AI like ChatGPT) were used in the research, content development or production of this podcast episode.

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Episode 3: Portraitists, Art and Fashion in The Gilded Age / “Face the Music” in style
Episode 6: The influencers and “tastemakers” of the Gilded Age
Episode 2: The Gilded Age Downstairs / “Money isn’t Everything” (or is it?)
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Welcome

A podcast that explores the real-life history, people and art of "The Gilded Age" inspired by the HBO streaming series.

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The Gilded Hour Podcast
The Gilded Hour Podcast

A podcast that explores the real-life history, people and art of “The Gilded Age” inspired by the HBO streaming series.

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The influencers and tastemakers of the Gilded Age
byAmanda Joy

HBO’s “The Gilded Age” series has featured real-life, prominent influencers of the historical era within its fictional environment. But who exactly were these individuals who shaped the Gilded Age into how we remember it today? In this podcast episode, we explore who the real, so-called tastemakers of this time period were in actual American history. Individuals such as Ward McAllister, Lina Astor (Caroline Schermerhorn Astor) and Edith Wharton were major figures who were both a product of, as well as molded, the era at the time according to their vision. Their “Gilded Age” helped give this time period the qualities we remember it as having to this day: a time period for showing off extravagant wealth, for practicing incredible formality, restraint, and upholding rigorous social codes. It was also a time period when many Americans came into money for the first time and therefore were “guided” by the more established elite circles as to how how they could and should behave, act, and even decorate their homes. We explore where New York’s elite even came from and who or what, exactly, they were modelling their “society” after.

// What inspired this episode?

Who, exactly, was Ward McAllister? And who was Lena Astor? We explore their background and lives to understand more about the people who molded both The Gilded Age according to their vision and left a lasting impact (for better or worse) on American “high society.” We also take a look at Edith Wharton, her life and her works as both an interior designer and an author who, in the 20th century, reflected on the Gilded Age and helped shape the period into what we now remember it as: a time of extravagance as well as rigid social mores.

// For more information about sources consulted for this episode and to listen ad-free, visit our website.

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