Gilded Age – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Sat, 25 Oct 2025 01:19:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 The Gilded Age Christmas Cookbook http://livelaughlovedo.com/home-decor/the-gilded-age-christmas-cookbook/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/home-decor/the-gilded-age-christmas-cookbook/#respond Thu, 02 Oct 2025 17:33:53 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/10/02/the-gilded-age-christmas-cookbook/ [ad_1]

I just finished watching the series The Gilded Age and really enjoyed it. Can’t wait for the next season! Set in New York and Newport, RI, it documents the lives of the old and newly rich, with their downtown mansions and numerous beach cottages, living in splendor in the late 19th century. Of course, the set production is spectacular as well as the costumes featured. It’s a feast for eyes in every way. I was contacted from a publisher about a new book based on The Gilded Age show and it’s a Christmas cookbook, which piqued my interest, so I got a copy to peruse and it’s a lovely book that I wanted to share with you. If you love that time period, as well as nostalgic Christmas ideas and recipes, you’ll enjoy this book by Becky Libourel Diamond.

From The Gilded Age Press release:

Sugar plums dancing, gingerbread glistening and cakes crowned with clouds of whipped cream — holiday tables of the Gilded Age were as extravagant as the era itself. While most Americans recognize sugar plums from Clement Clarke Moore’s beloved poem A Visit from St. Nicholas, few have ever savored one (spoiler: they’re not sugar-dusted plums!). Once the crown jewels of Victorian confections, these dainty delights disappeared with the dawn of the 20th century.

Now, food writer and historian Becky Libourel Diamond brings them back — along with dozens of other decadent desserts — in The Gilded Age Christmas Cookbook: Cookies and Treats from America’s Golden Era. More than a recipe collection, it’s a festive feast of flavors, stories and traditions from America’s most dazzling period.

Diamond has lovingly adapted recipes from the 19th century and earlier for today’s kitchens, making it possible to bake the very same cakes, pies, puddings, custards and candies that once graced Gilded Age holiday tables. Each recipe is paired with historical notes and sprinkled with lore, offering readers a colorful glimpse into a season when opulence met old-fashioned charm.

While the book brims with nostalgic Christmas favorites like brown sugar cookies and lemon gingerbread, it also highlights seasonal traditions from other celebrations, including Hanukkah and New Year’s. Accompanied by vibrant photographs, these recipes invite bakers of all levels to recreate the sparkle and spirit of holidays past in their own homes.

The chapters cover:  cookies, cakes, pies, puddings, and custards, as well as candies and confections, Hanukkah, and New Year’s desserts. The book has plenty of beautiful pictures and decadent desserts. You can find The Gilded Age Christmas cookbook on Amazon (affiliate link).


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“The Gilded Age” is at its best when Black prosperity is central to the story http://livelaughlovedo.com/culture-and-society/the-gilded-age-is-at-its-best-when-black-prosperity-is-central-to-the-story/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/culture-and-society/the-gilded-age-is-at-its-best-when-black-prosperity-is-central-to-the-story/#respond Mon, 11 Aug 2025 15:53:51 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/08/11/the-gilded-age-is-at-its-best-when-black-prosperity-is-central-to-the-story/ [ad_1]

Conspicuous excess being the true star of “The Gilded Age,” the season finale demanded a level of dazzle unmatched by anything that came before. But the Season 3 closer, “My Mind is Made Up,” matches that challenge by culminating in Bertha Russell’s (Carrie Coon) long-awaited ball, marking the end of the social season in Newport, Rhode Island.

For Bertha, hosting the ball completes a social and political hat trick. Her husband, George Russell (Morgan Spector), has secured the wealth and backing he needs to make his transcontinental railroad ambitions a reality. She’s married her daughter Gladys (Taissa Farmiga) to a British duke. Now, with the imperious Mrs. Astor (Donna Murphy) paralyzed by her child’s divorce scandal threatening to taint her flawless reputation, Bertha swoops in to produce the event of the year.

Peggy and William’s seaside courtship is vital scenery infrequently dramatized in fictionalized histories. From the start, “The Gilded Age” has taken care to authentically depict Peggy’s narrative trajectory without denying the same juicy intrigues coloring other characters’ lives.

The show’s costume and set production this season were already on fire, but this episode tops all that came before. Exquisite gowns and tiaras shine in the electric “display of illumination” – Bertha’s fancy description for strings of garden lights – brightening the sumptuous garden. The Russells’ Newport estate is a temple of overindulgence.

(Karolina Wojtasik/HBO) Denée Benton and Jordan Donica in “The Gilded Age”

More modest, but no less fantastic, is another social gathering taking place nearby serving the same purpose for Black society, hosted by the family of Mrs. Elizabeth Kirkland (Phylicia Rashad). What that ball has that Bertha’s lacks is a more profound romantic satisfaction.

In a season partly built around Gladys, a robber baron’s daughter, marrying into a royal title, the blossoming romance between Peggy Scott (Denée Benton) and Dr. William Kirkland (Jordan Donica) has been more satisfying to watch on several levels. Gladys’ marriage is the product of a financial arrangement brokered by Bertha, of which George disapproves.

But Peggy and William’s affection is real and worth fighting for. They create another kind of electricity that highlights Black Newport’s society ball when William strides onto the dance floor, politely interrupts Peggy’s waltz with another gentleman, and drops to one knee to propose. The moment slows down ever so slightly so we can drink it in. Peggy’s gown and skin glow.

This intimacy feels intentional. Peggy and William’s relationship overcomes social barriers having to do with class disparity and internalized racist stratification within the East Coast’s Black elite. Peggy’s family, the Scotts, are a well-to-do pillar of Brooklyn’s Black community headed by a formerly enslaved man who became a pharmacist and built his upper-middle-class family’s wealth from the ground up.

But the Kirklands come from different stock. Elizabeth snidely informs Peggy and her parents, Dorothy (Audra McDonald) and Arthur (John Douglas Thompson), that they are descended from Black Americans who were never enslaved. Moreover, her forebears fought in the Revolutionary War. And when the Scotts overhear Elizabeth yell at the family’s nanny for letting her grandchildren play outside without parasols, that reveals her disdain for dark complexions.

Inclusive casting in European period dramas is a recent development that’s been celebrated more than attacked.

Upsetting as these demonstrations of classism and colorism are, Peggy and William’s seaside courtship is vital scenery infrequently dramatized in fictionalized histories. From the start, “The Gilded Age” has taken care to authentically depict Peggy’s narrative trajectory without denying the same juicy intrigues coloring other characters’ lives. This is a factor of series creator Julian Fellowes tapping Sonja Warfield as his co-showrunner and hiring Black writers for the room, proving the benefit of insisting on diversity in storytelling perspectives.

Just as importantly, it lends an extra legitimacy to the show’s fictional interpretation of this moment in history. Inclusive casting in European period dramas is a recent development that’s been celebrated more than attacked. Still, some of these efforts are enacted more awkwardly than others. Series creators are correct in asserting that plenty of Black, brown and Asian people have been living in Europe for centuries. Justifying the multicultural casting in “Bridgerton,” a Regency-era fable, is simpler than explaining the presence of non-white nobles in Emperor Peter III’s Russia as depicted in “The Great.” One series that executes this well is Hulu’s short-lived “Harlots.”

That Black people played a foundational role in American history isn’t a question, although depictions of the breadth and variety of that experience are still rare. And presenting Black characters whose family names predate the Declaration of Independence is practically unheard of.

(Karolina Wojtasik/HBO) Leslie Uggams and Phylicia Rashad in “The Gilded Age”

To white Americans with old money bloodlines, a family tree linked to the American Revolution era carries substantial weight. But I’m wagering a large share of “Gilded Age” viewers had no idea that free Black folks and other people of color set down roots in colonies that paid for their children and grandchildren in the form of generational wealth. Through the Kirklands and Scotts, we get to see what Gilded Age prosperity looked like for a privileged subset of Black Americans about which most viewers were never aware.

Few watch “The Gilded Age” for its historical accuracy. Nevertheless, wondering how much of it is based on reality is only natural. There are plenty of historic links on the white New York side of the story: The Astors are a known name in the Old Money world, and other figures, like Nathan Lane’s Ward McAllister, existed too. Bill Camp’s J.P. Morgan founded an American financial institution that figures prominently in today’s economic landscape.

From there, Fellowes and Warfield made up most of the names for the drama’s principal characters, although the Russells’ rise closely mirrors that of the Vanderbilts.

Fellowes, who created “Downton Abbey,” originally intended to introduce Peggy as pretending to be a domestic for the van Rhijn household. But at the urging of Benton and historical consultant Dr. Erica Armstrong Dunbar, she became the secretary to Agnes van Rhijn (Christine Baranski)  and her sister Ada (Cynthia Nixon), who, along with their niece Marian Brook (Louisa Jacobson), encourage Peggy’s writing career.

Past seasons introduced actual Black historical figures, including newspaper editor T. Thomas Fortune (played by Sullivan Jones) and Booker T. Washington (Michael Braugher).

But as Dunbar explains in the drama’s official podcast, the third season’s Newport storyline is largely unexplored history.

The standard post-Reconstruction American Black experience follows the sharecroppers’ narrative. Their stories of pain, struggle and resilience in the face of Jim Crow are crucial to honoring Black people’s place in history, especially under an administration bent on diluting or erasing those histories.

Almost immediately after being sworn in to his second presidency, Donald Trump took aim at Black history and that community’s prosperity legacy under the guise of banishing diversity, equity and inclusion from American culture.

The Scotts’ Newport chapter tells a story of Black excellence and joy that’s equally as central to the American story. Importantly, that prosperity isn’t dependent on their white society counterparts, who hold more of the country’s wealth and do not view them as equals.

A March executive order railed against “improper ideology” and “divisive narratives,” targeting the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of African American History and Culture for a historical purging. Other government agencies took it upon themselves to remove references to renowned Black heroes, including the Tuskegee Airmen. The United States National Park Service began scrubbing its exhibits about Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad, but public pressure reversed that erasure.

Those signals endorse the continued omission of those stories from educational curricula that barely included them in the first place. The 1921 racist massacre in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the resulting decimation of the booming wealth center known as Black Wall Street, aren’t included in elementary and high school textbooks. Many first learned about that dark history chapter through another hit HBO series, “Watchmen.”

But again, these chapters codify the Black American experience as one defined by pain and primarily linked to chattel slavery. The Scotts’ Newport chapter tells a story of Black excellence and joy that’s equally as central to the American story. Importantly, that prosperity isn’t dependent on their white society counterparts, who hold more of the country’s wealth and do not view them as equals.

Although “The Gilded Age” doesn’t ignore the racism the Scotts and Kirklands confront in their social circles’ limited interactions, Fellowes and Warfield’s focus more intently on the dignity and grace with which they confront their offenders. Peggy and William’s meet-cute is only possible because the van Rhijns’ white family doctor refuses to treat Peggy when she falls ill, leading the Scotts to escort William to Brooklyn and their daughter’s sickbed.


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Because of their courtship — which takes a few twists, owing to Elizabeth’s gossipy meddling — William is nearby when an assassin infiltrates the Russells’ mansion and shoots George. His excellent training saves the show’s favorite captain of industry.

Once George regains consciousness, he rewards William with an untold sum that makes the physician’s eyes widen. William already has a successful practice, but it’s implied that this boon may assist him in settling up a household independent of his parents’ financial or emotional support. (William’s father, Frederick, played by Brian Stokes Mitchell, is warmer to Peggy than Elizabeth, which helps.)

This is a happier ending than even Bertha Russell enjoys. While she closes this chapter on the peak of New York’s social pyramid, the society queen’s marriage is very much on the rocks. George never approved of Bertha using Gladys as currency to secure their power in society, regardless of what that successful union gains them. As he rides away from a weeping Bertha, Gladys shares the news with her mother that she’s pregnant.

Provided Peggy and William make it to the altar, any crises they face aren’t likely to spill into New York’s society gossip columns. But the possibility that they might inspire people to surface accounts of their historic parallels lends an extra satisfaction to a fantastic season of “The Gilded Age.” Their love affair isn’t the stuff of fairy tales, and that’s the best part.

All episodes of “The Gilded Age” are streaming on HBO Max.

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A “Gilded Age” Guide to New York and Newport http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/a-gilded-age-guide-to-new-york-and-newport/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/travel/a-gilded-age-guide-to-new-york-and-newport/#respond Sun, 03 Aug 2025 19:32:08 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/08/04/a-gilded-age-guide-to-new-york-and-newport/ [ad_1]

Watching this season of The Gilded Age and want to live for a moment within that show’s world? It’s not difficult to understand your desire. During the late-19th-century period depicted, New York City and Newport alike were grand, blank canvases upon which the wealthy were able to erect massive and splendiferous testaments to their liquidity. It wasn’t all roses, by any means—the wives approached the Newport summer season with more rigor than their husbands had for business dealings, and divorcées like poor Aurora Fane were socially destitute despite no wrongdoing on their part. (Which is why it’s more fun to visit today.)

Below, we’ve rounded up the best hotels in both New York City and Newport to get your Bertha Russell on and steep in the period’s left-behind grandeur, plus some of the places you’d do well to visit during your sojourn to go even deeper.

New York City

Where to stay

This image may contain Building, House, Housing, Mansion, Architecture, Gate, and Palace

The Lotte New York Palace made its mark on impressionable viewers when it served as a frequent hangout for the entitled characters of Gossip Girl on TV, but its history catering to New York’s elite stretches back to 1882, when six neoclassical style townhouses were first erected with a courtyard that faced out to Madison Avenue. These historic buildings were annexed to a 55-story hotel tower in 1974 by hotelier Harry Helmsley, and the property has been pampering guests ever since. Today’s incarnation of the hotel features gorgeous, luxury guest rooms with up close and personal views of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, along with a separate hotel-within-a-hotel called The Towers, which offers more space, better views, and personal butlers. The hotel also has two restaurants and four bars, including one named Trouble’s Trust (after Leona Helmsley, AKA the Queen of Mean’s dog). —Juliana Shallcross

Modern master Martin Brudnizki’s Fifth Avenue riot of colors, patterns, and curiosities is perhaps his most impeccably orchestrated yet. The vaulted lobby is dressed up in ornate wall panels; corridors are bedecked in vivid wallpapers; rooms are filled with painted screens and pagoda-style lamps that are an ode to the travels of hotel owner Alex Ohebshalom. A go-for-broke assemblage of art, from old-world oils to modern photography, greets you around every corner. It’s the bold palette Brudnizki is known for, a dreamlike pastiche that would have been chaos in the hands of a less practiced hand. Just as adept is the hospitality, which extends from the ready-to-please butler service on every floor to extra touches like the candle that’s slipped into your room after you’ve complimented the scent in the lobby, a martini cart that appears at your door when you need a nightcap, and the warm welcome you’ll get when you return. And you will return, even if just for a perfect Negroni at the hotel’s Portrait Bar or an extravagant dish from Café Carmellini—but most of all, for the chance to wake up in a giant cabinet of curiosities in the heart of New York’s NoMad district. —Arati Menon

The best things to do

Quite a few Gilded Age mansions remain on Fifth Avenue, which once bore the mantle of Millionaire’s Row (Billionaire’s Row along 57th Street is an equivalent for our times, and not nearly as attractive). Quite a few of these are open to the public in one way or another. Fifth Avenue is long, and walking up and down its Central Park stretch isn’t easy. But the greatest concentration of its Gilded Age pleasures is uptown, in a walkable stretch of the 80s and 90s. There’s the Metropolitan Museum of Art, of course, on the east side of Central Park between 79th and 84th Street, which was founded in 1870 by the Union League Club. It’s a major landmark of the period, but lacks the intimacy of a mansion setting—the massive building in which it’s set was built to be a museum, and has been expanded many times.

And so, while you’re up there, be sure to also swing around the corner to Neue Galerie on East 86th, where 19th-century German and Austrian art hang in the 1914-constructed mansion of industrialist William Starr Miller, designed by Carrère & Hastings (of New York Public Library fame). There’s also the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum within the former residence of industrialist-philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, and the recently-renovated-and-restored-and-reopened Frick Collection in the former mansion of financier Henry Clay Frick. Downtown (relatively), in Murray Hill, you’ll also find the Morgan Library & Museum housed in the library of J.P. Morgan (who features in The Gilded Age) himself. A few of these spots, and many more, are featured on walking tours like this one for those who prefer a more organized itinerary.

Newport

Where to stay

The Chanler at Cliff Walk

Imagine this: you’ve sat in traffic all the way from Boston or New York City, and as you turn into the Chanler’s impressive gates, you’re immediately transported to the Gilded Age. You can finally exhale. An unbeatable location abutting Newport’s famed Cliff Walk, an award-winning fine-dining restaurant, and plenty of moments for quiet privacy in the thick of the action—the Chanler offers an alchemy that’s tough to beat, even by Newport standards. This isn’t a hotel for the one-and-done tourist looking to tick Newport off their list—it’s a luxurious, one-of-a-kind opportunity for even the most seasoned Newport connoisseurs to engage with this storied destination. It’s one of the most strategically located hotels in Newport, striking that perfect balance between not too close yet not too far from anything and everything. Here, you’re a few steps from the Cliff Walk’s northern terminus, a few further steps down to Easton’s Beach, and about one mile from the hustle and bustle of downtown. The walk to central Newport’s bars, restaurants, and attractions is pleasant enough, but the Chanler also offers a chauffeured Cadillac to bring you to and fro if you so choose. And why wouldn’t you? —Todd Plummer

The Vanderbilt is an elegant yet unpretentious snapshot of the Newport of yesterday and the Newport of today. Stepping into the lobby is like stepping into the foyer of this Gilded Age mansion during its heyday a hundred years ago. This meticulous resort recalls a time when Newport was the essential summer destination to see and be seen. Food and drink take center stage. For fine dining, The Gwynne serves contemporary twists on New England classics and utilizes Newport’s freshest catch—the Spanish-style grilled octopus is not to be missed. The place is like a music video for Taylor Swift’s Rhode Island ballad, “The Last Great American Dynasty.” —T.P.

The best things to do

Touring the mansions is the best thing to do in Newport, period. Dedicate at least a day to seeing a few of them. If you can only hit one, hit the Breakers, which was the summer cottage of the Vanderbilt family (for whom the Russells stand in on the show). It’s a shockingly large summer home that has to be seen to be believed. But there are quite a few other homes worth seeing around Newport. Operated by Newport Mansions and the Preservation Society of Newport County, and therefore under the same umbrella as the Breakers, are places like Marble House (also a bygone Vanderbilt deed) and Rosecliff, the Versailles-inflected summer home of silver heiress Theresa Fair. You can book your Breakers ticket, or your Breakers-plus-one mansion ticket, via GetYourGuide.

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