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The More I Think About What’s Next For The Gilded Age, The More I Worry For One Character

It’s going to be some time before we finally get to Season 4 of The Gilded Age, which we’ll eventually be able to watch with an HBO Max subscription. As I think about where the story could go, I keep coming back to one of my favorite characters: Ward McAllister. The partner-in-crime to society’s alpha figure, Mrs. Astor, is one of only a handful of characters on the show who are based on real people, and for McAllister, played by Nathan Lane, he has reached the end of the line, based on real history. Could this be the end of him on the show, too?

(Image credit: HBO)

The Real McAllister Did Write A Controversial Book

Towards the end of the dramatic Season 3 of the show, we learn that McAllister has published a best-selling book that reveals all the gossip and secrets of New York society, leading to his shunning by it, and the end of his friendship with Mrs. Astor (Donna Murphy). This really did happen. In 1890, McAllister wrote Society as I Have Found It, and, as the show explains, he held little back. Though he refrained from using real names in the book, it didn’t matter; everyone knew who he was talking about.

Once shunned, he doubled down and, in 1893, in a copy of the book that he had donated to the New York Historical Society in 1890, he wrote all the real names in the margins, identifying who he was speaking of. Whatever was left of his reputation was obliterated at that point. He continued to operate on the outskirts of society, and he continued to be a gabby gossip columnist of sorts for newspapers (he famously caused a row between New York City and Chicago in 1893 over the World’s Fair in the Windy City), but within the Gilded Age society, he was done.

Mrs. Astor in the foreground looking angry with Ward McAllister in the background looking upset in The Gilded Age

(Image credit: HBO)

What Does All This Mean For The Future Of The Character?

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