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Stewing over 'love, madness'

Author to share Gilded Age romance and tragedy at Gari Melchers Home and Studio


Date published: 1/22/2007

Archie and Amelie were the perfect celebrity couple of the Gilded Age--beautiful, brilliant, rich and unhappy.

Everyone knew who they were. Amelie Rives was the gorgeous Virginia author whose first novel told of forbidden female sexual passion and scandalized a public that turned it into a best-seller.

John Armstrong "Archie" Chanler was dashing, tragic and incredibly rich, an heir to the vast fortunes of the Astor family.

Their marriage, troubles and eventual divorce were followed avidly long before People magazine and US Weekly were even gleams in publishers' eyes.

Contemporaries of Gari Melchers, the Chanlers may or may not have known the artist, who spent the second half of his life as a Virginia gentleman painter, living and working at Belmont in Stafford County.

But whether or not they ever met, Gari Melchers and the Chanlers moved in the same glamorous circles and undoubtedly knew of one another, author Donna Lucey said.

"The Gilded Age world was a very small one," Lucey said, in which heirs and socialites, artists and writers could mix at the highest levels of society.

Lucey will speak about her new book "Archie and Amelie: Love and Madness in the Gilded Age" at a dinner to be held at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, at Gari Melchers Home and Studios.

The event, which takes place at the property's Studio Pavilion, costs $45 for members of Friends of Belmont and the University of Mary Washington community, $55 for nonmembers. After the dinner and presentation, Lucey will sign copies of the book pre-purchased from the Belmont Museum Shop.

Lucey and her husband, the writer Henry Wiencek, live in Charlottesville--not far from the Albemarle County estate of Castle Hill where Amelie Rives grew up and spent her later life.

The once-wealthy Rives family were genteel victims of Civil War ruin. But they were gentry nonetheless, and Amelie, born in 1863, saw herself as royalty, Lucey said.

She was splendid both physically and intellectually, and she was determined to use those gifts to gain wealth and restore Castle Hill to glory.

But the financial success of her first novel, "The Quick or the Dead?" came at a personal cost--criticism not only from literary scoffers but from shocked readers who assumed only an immoral woman could write such a breathless tale of female desire.


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WHAT: Dinner and book-signing featuring Donna Lucey

WHEN: 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 3

COST: $55, $45

BOOK: 'Archie and Amelie: Love and Madness in the Gilded Age'--copies for signing must be pre-purchased from Belmont Museum Shop

RESERVATIONS: 654-1848 by Jan. 29



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Date published: 1/22/2007


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