In 1883, war was waged between two opera houses in New York Society. Why were the theatres pitted against one another, and what did the battle mean for the upper echelons of the East Coast?

By Elinor Evans

Published: Sunday, 29 October 2023 at 17:02 PM


The War of the Operas of 1883 is a society battle dramatised in series two of Julian Fellowes’ historical drama, The Gilded Age.

The action sees the fictional Bertha Russell, a newly-wealthy wife of railroad and steel tycoon George Russell, take on established society figures including Mrs Astor (a real historical figure) and other ‘old money’ rivals.

In season one of The Gilded Age, the Russells struggled for acceptance in this world of rigid social hierarchy, connections, and ritual – as was the case in reality for many nouveau riche families.

Many of the Knickerbockers of New York – descendants of the Anglo-Dutch families who had settled in what was then New Amsterdam in the 17th and 18th centuries – were determined that these interlopers were not to make it into ‘real society’.

Newly-minted families included the Vanderbilts, the Carnegies and the Rockefellers, many of them businessmen who were labelled ‘robber barons’ – shorthand for the handful of men who dominated industry in late 19th century America.

“They forged their path in the business world at a time when new technologies – steel, oil refining, railroads and steam-powered factory technology – were remaking the material basis of the western world,” writes Adam IP Smith. “They were the exploiters, not the inventors: men who took small-scale operations and scaled them up, and then up again.”

Though the families of these tycoons bought up or built grand houses on New York’s prestigious Fifth Avenue, summered and played lawn tennis in the fashionable coastal town of Newport, and employed etiquette guides to help them navigate the vagaries of polite society, they struggled to break into the city’s most elite circles.