Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call me crazy but I think this show gets better each season - it is a bit ridiculous but I enjoy it anyway. I can’t wait to see what happens with Gladys, Miss Brooke and Jack the now rich servant (whatever his title is).
You’re not crazy, you’re right.
Anonymous wrote:Call me crazy but I think this show gets better each season - it is a bit ridiculous but I enjoy it anyway. I can’t wait to see what happens with Gladys, Miss Brooke and Jack the now rich servant (whatever his title is).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This last episode really got me! Poor Gladys. Sold off to the Duke. I wonder how close they will stay with the Consuelo Vanderbilt backstory.
I don’t think they intend tío follow the Consuelo Vanderbilt story religiously because for one thing the Duke of Marlborough did not have an overbearing sister.
I listen to the official podcast and according to the actress who plays Gladys, she’ll be finding her voice as a Duchess in the second half of the season.
Anonymous wrote:I’m super impressed that people are still watching this show. It was really torture to watch and I will watch ANYTHING with costumes and suspiciously woke olden times people.
Anonymous wrote:What I find really baffling about this show is how it feels like they're just making it up as they go and there really isn't any cohesiveness or planning. Gladys suddenly has a new boyfriend so instead of us feeling like it's tragic he's what, the third guy Gladys has wanted to get engaged to? Ada gets married but then her husband just immediately dies the next episode. It's almost comical at this point.
Peggy is the worst for it, her storyline is all over the place. Does no one remember her lost kid? Her Dad
stole her son but Peggy's just forgotten about it now?
Anonymous wrote:This article on how the created the wedding and its relationship to Consuelo Vanderbilt's wedding/marriage is worth the read: https://www.vulture.com/article/the-gilded-age-gladys-wedding-behind-the-scenes.html
Some highlights:
- They clearly could not copy the Vanderbilt wedding exactly because Consuelo married in the 1890s and Gladys' wedding is happening about a decade earlier, so it's more of an "inspired by"
- It was filmed at a gothic revival cathedral in Albany because the church Vanderbilt wed in burned down in 1901. The Albany church was designed by the same architect.
- They actually had to tone down the amount of flowers in the church and the Russell house versus real life because the real thing was so over the top it just wouldn't look elegant or appealing on the show (or would get in the way of some of the long shots they wanted to get). They also noted they do the same thing with the art in people's homes, especially the Russell's -- if the set was more true to life, it would be impossible to film in because there'd be so much priceless artwork in the background it would be distracting. These people were all about showcasing wealth to the exclusion of taste or good sense.
- IRL Consuelo was literally locked in her room in the weeks leading up to her wedding and openly weeping at the ceremony. They toned both details down in order to give Gladys more agency as a character, which I get because otherwise this storyline would be too depressing.
Anonymous wrote:This last episode really got me! Poor Gladys. Sold off to the Duke. I wonder how close they will stay with the Consuelo Vanderbilt backstory.
Anonymous wrote:I’m super impressed that people are still watching this show. It was really torture to watch and I will watch ANYTHING with costumes and suspiciously woke olden times people.