by Daniel Johnson
July 14, 2025
With the addition of actresses Deneé Benton, Phylicia Rashad, and Audra McDonald, the interval drama has deepened its portrayal of Black aristocracy within the 1800s.
When HBO premiered “The Gilded Age” in 2022, the interval drama sparked early comparisons to Julian Fellowes’ earlier hit, “Downton Abbey,” which centered virtually completely on white British aristocracy. Nevertheless, because the sequence, created and written by Fellowes, has progressed, its scope has broadened, increasing to incorporate the often-overlooked tales of Black Individuals throughout the Gilded Age.
In line with The New York Instances, the present’s expanded narrative is essentially due to the contributions of acclaimed historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar, who serves as its historic advisor, and actress Deneé Benton, who performs Peggy Scott—an bold journalist, Agnes van Rhijn’s secretary, and a member of Brooklyn’s Black upper-middle class.
As Sonja Warfield, who shares showrunner accountability with Fellowes, advised the outlet, the addition of Phylicia Rashad as Elizabeth Kirkland, along with Benton’s Scott and her mom, Dorothy, performed by Audra McDonald, has allowed for a larger complexity of portrayals that align with the histories of Black upper-class households in New England and New York Metropolis.
“As a result of it’s so small, what was attention-grabbing about Newport in that point interval was that Black and white communities blended greater than they did in different areas,” Warfield stated. “The varsity system was, in reality, built-in. In the event you had been Black or white, you could possibly have neighbors across the nook from you who had been Black or white.”
She continued, “Elizabeth Kirkland is the Mrs. Astor of Black elite society in Newport. So usually, after we see Black characters depicted on this time interval, it’s only one story, and it’s all in relation to slavery or sharecropping. What folks don’t know is that, in reality, these folks existed.”
The three actresses, largely thought-about Black Broadway royalty, additionally shared ideas on how their characters hook up with the colorist and classist attitudes of each the Eighteen Eighties and the current day, which they mentioned in a June interview with New York Instances critic Salamishah Tillet.
Benton famous the similarities between herself and her character, telling Tillet that she feels an in depth connection to Scott, and in addition mirrored on the work she did with Armstrong Dunbar to persuade the present’s creator to develop The Gilded Age’s depiction of Black aristocratic society.
“It makes me emotional to consider how far we’ve come since 2019 with the present. Initially, we had been going to look at Peggy stroll a really slender path and see her dad and mom typically. And Dr. Erica Dunbar and I had been in a position to be like: “We now have a chance to point out one thing that’s by no means been onscreen. We now have to widen this lens.” And now we now have a sturdy Black solid on this present. We now have Black writers; we now have a lot richness,” Benton stated.
Rashad additionally famous that the conventions of Eighteen Eighties society aren’t terribly completely different from a few of at the moment’s social media-driven discussions of colorism, featurism, and different intra-community points.
“I need to say, in rising up, I knew a few women who had been Elizabeths, who didn’t need their kids out within the solar and no one was ever going to be ok for his or her son. It occurs to folks at the moment — if it’s not about colour, it’s about one thing else. Folks being locked right into a previous that they didn’t create however that was handed to them,” Rashad advised Tillet.
At one level, the ladies shared a touching change that highlighted their mutual respect and Broadway ties. Benton grew to become emotional upon studying McDonald would play her mom, saying, “I didn’t understand tears had began popping out of my face,” and recalling how she studied McDonald’s performances obsessively in her youth. She added, “Audra feels about Ms. Phylicia the way in which I really feel about Audra.”
McDonald adopted by reflecting on Rashad’s profound affect, sharing that attending to know her and her household held deep that means, as Rashad stays a legend, even amongst fellow icons.
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