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The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch
The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Entertainment
  • Newsweek

The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 – Release Date, Schedule, How To Watch

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors The Gilded Age returns to HBO and Max this Sunday, kicking off season three at 9:00 pm ET/PT. Starring Carrie Coon, Christine Baranski, Cynthia Nixon, Morgan Spector, Louisa Jacobson, Denée Benton, Taissa Farmiga, Harry Richardson, and more, The Gilded Age takes place in 1880s New York, following the scandals of the old money elites. Morgan Spector, Carrie Coon, and Harry Richardson in HBO's The Gilded Age Season 3. Morgan Spector, Carrie Coon, and Harry Richardson in HBO's The Gilded Age Season 3. Karolina Wojtasik/HBO Season two aired in the fall of 2023, and now we return for a summer fling with the series, as the eight episodes play out from June 22 through to August 10. We've compiled all the information below on how to watch The Gilded Age season three, episode one, as well as The Gilded Age season three, episode one release time and The Gilded Age season three, episode one release date. The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 Release Date The Gilded Age season three, episode one, will be available to stream on Max on June 22, 2025. New episodes of The Gilded Age season three premiere on Max each Sunday through May 29, 2025. The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 – How to Watch The Gilded Age season three, episode one, lands at 9:00 pm ET/PT on HBO and will be available to stream on Max. You will need HBO or a Max subscription to watch The Gilded Age season three. A basic subscription for Max with ads is $9.99 per month or $99.99 for the year, and a standard no-ads subscription starts at $16.99 per month or $169.99 annually. What Time Does The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 Come Out? The Gilded Age season three, episode one, will be available on HBO and Max from 9:00 pm ET/PT. With the evening streaming release in the US, the debut time in other time zones will differ. Here is when The Gilded Age season three, episode one will air in your time zone: June 22 BRT: 10:00 pm June 23 BST : 2:00 am : 2:00 am CEST : 3:00 am : 3:00 am IST : 6:30 am : 6:30 am JST : 10:00 am : 10:00 am AET : 11:00 pm : 11:00 pm NZDT: 1:00 pm The Gilded Age Season 3 Release Schedule Episode One: June 22 June 22 Episode Two: June 29 June 29 Episode Three: July 6 July 6 Episode Four: July 13 July 13 Episode Five: July 20 July 20 Episode Six: July 27 July 27 Episode Seven: August 3 August 3 Episode Eight: August 10 The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1 Runtime Episodes of The Gilded Age typically run for one hour, as per IMDb. What Will Happen in The Gilded Age Season 3 Episode 1? The plot details for episode one of The Gilded Age season three read: Chronicles the societal shifts in 1880s New York as old money clashes with new, igniting a fierce rivalry that exposes a period of immense upheaval and transformation. (as per IMDb) You can also read the full season three synopsis: The American Gilded Age was a period of immense economic and social change, when empires were built, but no victory came without sacrifice. Following the Opera War, the old guard is weakened and the Russells stand poised to take their place at the head of society. Bertha sets her sights on a prize that would elevate the family to unimaginable heights whileGeorge risks everything on a gambit that could revolutionize the railroad industry — if it doesn't ruin him first. Across the street, the Brook household is thrown into chaos as Agnes refuses to accept Ada's new position as lady of the house. Peggy meets a handsome doctor from Newport whose family is less than enthusiastic about her career. As all of New York hastens toward the future, their ambition may come at the cost of what they truly hold dear. (as per Warner Bros Discovery)

Season Three Of ‘The Gilded Age' Is Rife With Power Shifts Among Society's Elite
Season Three Of ‘The Gilded Age' Is Rife With Power Shifts Among Society's Elite

Forbes

time6 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Season Three Of ‘The Gilded Age' Is Rife With Power Shifts Among Society's Elite

Carrie Coon and Morgan Spector star in "The Gilded Age" as Bertha and George Russell. Photograph by Barbara Nitke/HBO 'I think thematically the whole season [is] about who's in charge; who is in charge in society, who's in charge of marriages, who has the power. I think the power shift is relevant to all the stories and all the characters,' says Sonya Warfield, the co-writer and executive producer, about the new season of The Gilded Age . Set in the United Stated during the 1880s, the series follows several families navigating the social landscape of a city undergoing rapid change, rife with conflict between old and new money. The Gilded Age explores themes of social mobility, wealth, class, and the changing American society during a time of immense industrial growth. The series stars Carrie Coon, Morgan Spector, Cynthia Nixon, Christine Baranski, Louisa Jacobson, Taissa Farmiga, and Denee Benton. Along with Warfield, Julian Fellowes is the creator, the executive producer, and the co-writer of The Gilded Age. Coon and Spector play Bertha and George Russell who are very concerned with the trajectory of their daughter, Gladys (played by Farmiga), hoping to marry her off to an appropriate suitor, which Fellowes says is accurate for the time period. However, he points out that, 'Marian is resistant to the idea of simply settling down. She wants her life to be something. She wants to do something that adds up to more than getting dressed for the opera or not being late for dinner. But in that society, it was very difficult for women who weren't content to simply run the house and run the children and say, 'Have you had a good day dear.' That was not enough for them.' He adds, of Gladys' story, much of which centers around her reluctance to adhere to the will of her parents, 'I think that one of the key moments of growing up, for all of us, is when you realize you don't have to follow your parents' prejudices. You've loved them, and that's great, but I [think this] is also what young people have gone through always. It's not disloyal, it's just an acceptance that you are a different person from your parents.' Cynthia Nixon and Christine Baranski star in "The Gilded Age" as Ada Brook and Agnes Van Rhijn. Photograph by Karolina Wojtasik/HBO Bertha's drive to secure what she sees as the ideal future for her daughter causes issues in her relationship with George, Spector explains, saying, 'The rift that develops between them is not a minor one. They see the situation of Gladys' marriage in a fundamentally different way. And so, yeah, they're pulling with all of the might of their separate identities in opposite directions.' Coon jumps in to say that, 'George can't really understand the stakes for a woman. The woman's purview is very different. He doesn't understand our instinct for survival, which is, in this case, through marriage, so there really is a huge lack of psychological understanding between them that's quite sad.' As for what's happening with sisters Agnes and Ada, played by Baranski and Nixon, respectively, Nixon, pipes in to reveal — just a bit — saying that things won't be 'status quo' by any means for the pair. "It is really fun to put these characters in different situations, [because] it's not interesting to watch the same character do the same thing over and over again. It's fun to take them and put them in a wildly different situation and watch them flounder and scramble and try and fake it until they make it.' Playing Peggy Scott, Agnes' secretary, and often confidante, Denee Benton, feels that her storyline, which features a look at Black society at the time, is helping people to understand the past in an unique way. Jordan Donica and Denée Benton star as Dr. William Kirland and Peggy Scott in "The Gilded Age." Photograph by Karolina Wojtasik/HBO 'I think that Julian planting the seed of this Black elite world in our show and it getting to blossom into this garden with all of us watering it is just astounding to me. I'm learning history and I feel like I'm getting to embody something really important and I want to know more and more.' While The Gilded Age features wealthy characters and problems that might seem outdated, this isn't exactly the case, says Warfield, '[These] are universal themes for human beings, whether it's love, death, marriage, all of that. And so, even though those people were around in the 1880s, those are still the themes that we live out today.' Season three of 'The Gilded Age' premieres Sunday, June 22nd at 9 e/p on HBO Max. The series is also available for streaming on the HBO Max app.

The Gilded Age Season 3 OTT Release: Date, Time, Cast, What to Expect, and More About Carrie Coon-Christine Baranski Show
The Gilded Age Season 3 OTT Release: Date, Time, Cast, What to Expect, and More About Carrie Coon-Christine Baranski Show

Pink Villa

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Pink Villa

The Gilded Age Season 3 OTT Release: Date, Time, Cast, What to Expect, and More About Carrie Coon-Christine Baranski Show

After successful two seasons, the Carrie Coon and Christine Baranski show is all set to retuen for a new run on HBO and Max for streaming. The Gilded Age season 3 will release on June 22, spanning 8 episodes that will air every Sunday until August 10, when this year's run will conclude. So far, the titles of the first three parts have been revealed to the public. The episodes are set to air at 9 p.m. ET/PT every weekend. Gilded Age season 3 release plans After premiering on June 22, The Gilded Age season 3 will air episode number 18 (first for this season), Who Is In Charge Here?, followed by episodes 19 and 20, What the Papers Say and Love Is Never Easy respectively. The titles for the remaining five episodes are yet to be unveiled. Returning post a year and a half of break, Gilded Age season 3 will tell the story of Bertha Russell (Carrie Coon), Agnes Van Rhijn (Christine Baranski), Marion Brook (Louisa Jacobson), and Peggy Scott (Denée Benton), who have a new challenge in front of them, after recent events have spun the wheel for them. It remains to be known what happens once Gladys (Taissa Farmiga) learns of her mother's plans to get her to marry the Duke of Buckingham (Ben Lamb). Who has joined the Gilded Age season 3? Apart from the series regulars, Phylicia Rashad will play Mrs. Elizabeth Kirkland, a woman from a Newport family; Brian Stokes Mitchell will star as Black pastor Frederick Kirkland; Jordan Donica as Dr. William Kirkland, and Victoria Clark as Joan Carlton. Other newcomers include Merritt Wever, Bill Camp, Leslie Uggams, Lisagay Hamilton, Jessica Frances Dukes, Paul Alexander Nolan, Hatti Morahan, and Andrea Martin. It is known that the new part will resume from the era after the Opera War, where 'immense economic and social change' is expected. The Russell family stands a chance to come out on top of the social pyramid. Meanwhile, the van Rhijn-Brook family goes through its own set of turmoils as Agnes and Ada butt heads over the title of the 'lady of the house'.

‘White Lotus' star talks Trump-voting character on the show, criticizes her own Trump-supporting family
‘White Lotus' star talks Trump-voting character on the show, criticizes her own Trump-supporting family

Fox News

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Fox News

‘White Lotus' star talks Trump-voting character on the show, criticizes her own Trump-supporting family

"The White Lotus" star Carrie Coon admitted to "The View" on Friday that she does have friends and family who support President Donald Trump just like one of the characters on the popular HBO show. During Friday's episode of the ABC talk show, the actress discussed her "White Lotus" co-star Leslie Bibb playing a Trump voter and noted that she also has Trump-supporting family members in real life. Coon went on to say they're now impossible to talk politics with because they follow an authoritarian. "I had family members who voted for Trump. We're from Ohio. We had to have those conversations," she said when asked by co-host Ana Navarro if it's "actually possible to have friends who don't share your same beliefs." A scene from the show went viral in March when Kate, played by Bibb, appears to reveal to her horrified best friends Laurie and Jaclyn, played by Coon and Michelle Monaghan, that she voted for Trump. During the scene, Kate's friends – who assumed she was a Democrat – slowly get it out of her during dinner that she voted for Trump. After Kate admits her husband is a Republican, Laurie asks her outright if she supported him. She responds with a curt smile and a long pause before saying, "Are we really going to talk about Trump tonight?'' and quickly changing the subject. Later that night, Kate sees her friends laughing and mocking her decision to vote for Trump. After admitting that she has Trump-supporting friends, Coon suggested to "The View" co-hosts that those voters are brainwashed. "I think there was a time when it was possible to have conversations about it," she said. "But when you're in an authoritarian slide it becomes a closed system. The leader is the source of information. That is not penetrable, so when you're inside of that circular information system, then it's very hard." Several of the co-hosts nodded in agreement. Coon continued, saying Trump voters don't have much "basis in fact" any longer. "It's very hard to talk about anything because there's no basis in fact. And now we're seeing the defunding of the NIH [National Institute of Health] and NSF [National Science Foundation]," she said, adding, "So, like, science which – I believe in science, and I don't think, there's not like a — there's no middle ground there." Co-host Joy Behar followed up by asking if Americans will be shocked into seeing Trump's dark side because of the cuts he's made to government programs. Coon indicated she wasn't so sure. "I think narrative is very powerful and it's very easy to teach them that they should blame immigrants or trans people while billionaires are picking their pockets," she declared.

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