Prime Video's new historical drama 'The Gray House' explores espionage during the Civil War through the stories of unlikely heroines, including Southern socialites, a formerly enslaved woman, and a sex worker. Created by Leslie Greif, Darrell Fetty, and John Sayles, the eight-episode limited series is executive produced by Kevin Costner and Morgan Freeman. A Variety review praises its depiction of abolition efforts but criticizes its cluttered narrative and melodramatic elements.
'The Gray House' is inspired by true events and set against the backdrop of the Civil War, focusing on the Van Lew family in Richmond, Virginia. The series opens on July 4, 1860, nine months before the war begins, at a lavish Independence Day party hosted by Eliza Van Lew, played by Mary-Louise Parker. Tension simmers as Southern states secede, but the Van Lew estate serves as a safe house on the Underground Railroad, operated with the help of free Black staff like Uncle Isham (Ben Vereen) and Mary Jane (Amethyst Davis), who has returned from Liberia.
When the war erupts and Confederate President Jefferson Davis (Sam Trammell) establishes headquarters at The Gray House in Richmond, the protagonists expand their efforts into a spy network. Elizabeth Van Lew (Daisy Head), Eliza's daughter, and others, including baker Thomas McNiven (Christopher McDonald) and sex worker Clara Parish (Hannah James), gather intelligence from the Davis estate for the Union Army. Mary Jane infiltrates as a lady's maid to Mrs. Davis (Laura Morgan), voluntarily returning to captivity despite her freedom since Mr. Van Lew's death.
Directed by Roland Joffé, the show highlights the risks faced by these women, with Parker, Head, and Davis delivering effective performances on the dangers of their work. However, the Variety review notes that the series becomes 'clunky and overrun with extraneous characters and narratives,' causing the central women to get lost. It criticizes melodramatic acting, exaggerated espionage tactics, and caricatured villains like lawman Stokely Reeves (Paul Anderson) and slave catcher Bully Lumpkin (Robert Knepper). The narrative also includes battlefield soldiers and even assassin John Wilkes Booth (Charles Craddock), leading to an uneven story.
Despite these flaws, the review acknowledges the show's accurate portrayal of the antebellum South's cruelty and the heroes who risked everything for abolition and democracy. All eight episodes premiere on February 26, 2026, on Prime Video.