The Gilded Age reveals how Gladys and Larry Russell deal with the emotional pressure of a mother who loves her own reflection—and how their choices contrast with Marian’s path and the clarity of Agnes van Rhijn.
Tag: Miscelana in English
Selected Miscelana articles available in English. Here you’ll find cultural analysis, reviews, and essays on cinema, television, literature, and pop culture, translated from the original Portuguese to reach a wider international audience
“The Old Guard 2” and the End of a Fantasy That Once Brought Comfort
Sequel fails to capture the magic of the original, resulting in a weakened and irrelevant film
Episode 3 Recap – Season 3 of The Gilded Age: Bertha Russell, I Hate You!
Betrayals, romantic frustrations, and a potential arranged marriage that could implode before the “I do”
What If Gladys Russell’s True Inspiration Was… Gladys Vanderbilt?
For years, we thought she mirrored Consuelo Vanderbilt’s fate — but maybe The Gilded Age heroine is actually following in the footsteps of her namesake, with far less marital drama and just as much glamour.
Bertha Russell: Between Ambition and Maternal Instinct
A determined mother, a strategic woman, and a symbol of an era: the protagonist of The Gilded Age exposes old wounds around ambition, motherhood, and female power.
Rachel Zegler’s Comeback
From meme target to reborn star: how Evita became the perfect role for the actress from Snow White
And Just Like That makes unbelievable blunder and kills off the same father twice
And Just Like That makes unbelievable blunder and kills off the same father twice
The War of the Rosés: Brad and Angelina’s Battle Rages On
The fight over Château Miraval reveals much more than French grapes — it lays bare a war over control, narrative, and survival.
They Weren’t Perfect — And That’s Why We Remember Them
Jane Austen’s Heroines and the Power of Intelligence, Morality, and Silent Resilience
The Return of Oasis: The Gallagher Brothers’ Reunion
The Gallagher brothers return to the stage with a powerful performance, where music still speaks louder than anything else.
