The Golden Girls’ ages were never revealed on screen during the show. However, with some detective work, fans of the NBC sitcom can figure them out.
The classic NBC comedy The Golden Girls broke boundaries with its cast of four older women — representation that was previously lacking on television. Any woman over forty on TV was usually relegated to the role of mother or grandmother at the time, and often stayed on the sidelines. The Golden Girls put its protagonists front and center, showing them working, falling in love, and living their lives on their own terms in a way that hadn’t been seen before. All four of its central actors won Emmy Awards for their work on the show.
Though key to the concept, the main characters’ ages were usually not explicitly stated. However, some deductive work provides a pretty safe estimate of how old the Golden Girls were supposed to be when the show started. The basic facts to work with are that The Golden Girls began in 1985 and ended in 1992 — both in real life and in-universe. For simplicity’s sake, each season is considered a separate year, because the show ran for seven seasons. That means coming up with each Golden Girl’s age in Season 1 all the way to Season 7 is easy for a superfan.
Updated on February 7, 2024 by Robert Vaux: The Golden Girls has become an evergreen sitcom and its groundbreaking formula remains no less pertinent today than it was in the 1980s when it aired. The article has been updated to include information on the show’s four main characters and the actors who portrayed them. It has also been reformatted to fit CBR’s current guidelines.
How Old Was Rose Nylund on Golden Girls?
Name | Played by | From | Job | Marital Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rose Nylund | Betty White | St. Olaf, MN | Grief counseling | Widowed |
Rose became the signature role of TV and movie sweetheart Betty White: a cheerful and somewhat naive Midwesterner who moves in with the others after her husband passes away. She’s played as a bit of a dim bulb, full of wild stories about her very rural (fictional) town of St. Olaf, Minnesota. The stories often gave White a chance to display her peerless comic timing, and helped earn her the Emmy for Best Actress in a Comedy in 1986 — the first for the show’s cast — for Season 1, Episode 16, “In a Bed of Rose’s.” She had previously won two Emmys for her work on The Mary Tyler Moore Show.
White was in her early 60s when she first starred on the show. Rose’s age is the easiest to track down, thanks to a line of dialogue from Dorothy in Season 1, Episode 22, “Job Hunting.” During a conversation in which Rose discussed her difficulty finding a new job after losing her employment at the grief counseling center, Dorothy revealed that Rose was 55. Going off the idea that Season 1 takes place within the same year, Rose would have been 55 at the start of The Golden Girls as well, making her the oldest Golden Girl… after Sophia, of course. By the end of the series, Rose was 62.
How Old Was Dorothy Zbornak on Golden Girls?
Name | Played by | From | Job | Marital Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dorothy Zbornak | Bea Arthur | Brooklyn, NY | Substitute Teacher | Divorced |
Dorothy Zbornak is the de facto centerpiece of the show: a non-nonsense substitute teacher from Brooklyn who comes to Miami after a painful divorce. She’s acerbic and short-tempered, but also the most sensible and practical of the four women. Actor Bea Arthur had already achieved worldwide fame as Maude Findlay, first on the groundbreaking All in the Family and then on her own spin-off series, Maude, which ran from 1972 to 1978. The latter series also featured Rue McClanahan, who rejoined Arthur on The Golden Girls. Arthur won an Emmy for Maude before repeating the feat in 1988 for The Golden Girls. Her departure from the series at the end of Season 7 signaled the close of its run, though the rest of the cast would continue for another season without Arthur in the spin-off, The Golden Palace.
Besides Rose, none of the other Golden Girls outright stated their ages, so this is where the deductive work begins. Bea Arthur’s character Dorothy stated she was a Leo in Season 4, Episode 10, “Stan Takes a Wife,” placing her birthday either in late July or early-to-late August. Earlier in Season 3, Episode 5, “Nothing to Fear But Fear Itself,” Sophia told Dorothy the story of the night Dorothy was conceived. Sophia stated it happened in 1931, making it likely Dorothy was born sometime in 1932. The math adds up to Dorothy being 53 at the start of the show and 60 at the series’ end.
Sophia Petrillo’s Age Didn’t Match Actor Estelle Getty
Name | Played by | From | Job | Marital Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sophia Petrillo | Estelle Getty | Sicily | Retired | Widow |
Sophia is Dorothy’s mother, born in Sicily and fleeing to America in order to escape an arranged marriage. She moves in with the other three, following a fire at her retirement home. She’s smart and sharp-tongued, though often more emotionally detached than her daughter. Though she remained a central part of the show throughout, Getty was billed as a supporting actor, which allowed her to win the Emmy for the part in 1988: the same year as Arthur, and Getty’s third straight nomination.
Sophia was never afraid to admit how old she was, often using it to her advantage over the other women in the house. Ironically, Getty was a year younger than Bea Arthur, who played Sophia’s daughter Dorothy, and in her early sixties, when she started work on the show. The clever use of makeup and a wig helped Getty match her character’s age. Season 2, Episode 25, “A Piece of Cake” revealed Sophia celebrated her 50th birthday in 1956, putting her at 79 at The Golden Girls‘ beginning. Sophia was 86 by the final season.
Blanche Devereaux’s Age Was The Most Mysterious
Name | Played by | From | Job | Marital Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Blanche Devereaux | Estelle Getty | Atlanta, GA | Art Museum Employee | Widow |
Rue McClanahan’s character Blanche Devereaux kept her age a mystery (and a recurring joke) throughout most of The Golden Girls. It’s in keeping with her character: a self-absorbed Southern belle who maintains an active social life in the wake of her husband’s death at the start of the series. Blanche’s vigorous sexual activity was often the subject of gags, but also underscored the show’s central point that life doesn’t end at middle age. McClanahan herself had a long career in film and television, including a large supporting role on the sitcom Maude where she first worked with Bea Arthur. She won an Emmy for her role in The Golden Girls in 1987.
Blanche goes to great lengths to disguise her age on the show. Rose went so far as to search through official records to find out, only to learn it was “deleted by authority of the governor.” In Season 2, Episode 1, “End of the Curse,” Blanche believed she was pregnant and stated she’d be 65 by the time the child graduates from high school. Assuming her child would graduate at 17, that would make Blanche 48 in 1986 — and 47 at the start of the series. However, Season 3, Episode 25, “Mother’s Day,” confirmed Blanche turned 17 in 1949 when she and her mother reminisced about one of Blanche’s dates. That made Blanche 53 at the start of the series. Considering how easily Blanche lied to her housemates about her age and that Sophia immediately called her out in Season 2 by correcting that she’d be 70 when her kid graduated, it’s safe to assume that 53 was her actual age going into The Golden Girls. Blanche would have been 60 in the last episode.
This evidence somewhat debunks the fan theory that the actresses were playing characters much younger than their actual age. Rue McClanahan’s age in 1985 was 52, one year younger than Blanche. Estelle Getty was 62 in 1985, so she was 17 years younger than the character she portrayed. Both Betty White and Bea Arthur were 63 when The Golden Girls premiered, making them the only two to be older than their beloved alter egos.