Are the 'Real Housewives of Salt Lake City' Mormon? Info on Bravo Cast

The Salt Lake City 'Housewives' Talk Childhood Trauma, the Future, and More
By Dan ClarendonSep. 28 2022, Updated 4:Fifty five p.m. ET
If you’re wondering if any of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City are Mormon, you’re now not alone. “The first query other people ask you once they to find out for those who’re from Utah is, ‘Are you Mormon, and are you polygamist?'" cast member Heather Gay says in a Bravo Insider preview of RHOSLC.
Turns out, the women of the Real Housewives series “represent a spectrum of religious beliefs, including Mormonism, Islam, Judaism, and Pentecostalism,” as Bravo says.
Most of the 'Real Housewives of Salt Lake City' cast was raised in the church, but only two are still Mormon.
Whitney Rose, Meredith Marks, Mary Cosby, and Heather Gay on 'The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City'
In her cast bio, Heather says she’s “Mormon-ish,” and in the Bravo Insider preview for the show, co-star Lisa Barlow describes herself as “Mormon 2.0.”
Fellow RHOSLC star Whitney Rose, meanwhile, says in the clip that she “grew up Molly Mormon” — a nickname for a stereotypical female member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — but another preview reveals that Whitney, Heather’s cousin, was excommunicated from the church.
The other three Housewives aren’t Mormon either. Mary Cosby is Pentecostal, Meredith Marks says she’s “proud to be Jewish” but “not a very religious person,” and Jen Shah tells viewers she was raised Mormon but converted to Islam.
The 'Housewives' offered a primer on Mormonism.
“Mormonism is a uniquely American religion. It was founded by the first Mormon prophet, Joseph Smith, and it has grown exponentially, and now there’s more than six million members around the world,” Heather says in the first preview.
Heather also describes what it’s like inside a Mormon temple: “The Mormon temple is elaborate and ornate in its purity. You have beautiful chandeliers, you have well-lit stained-glass windows, like, open air. But you don’t have gold, and you don’t have marble. You don’t have all of the, like, trappings of wealth.”
But not just everyone can enter a Mormon temple. “You have to answer a rigorous set of questions by two different men every two years to enter the temple,” Heather says in the clip.
“To go into what I call the pretty buildings, you need to follow the rules of the church,” adds Lisa. “A quick lesson on how to be a good Mormon: Don’t drink, don’t swear, treat your body like a temple.”
Don’t expect ‘Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’ to be dry.
Not all Mormons follow that no-alcohol rule, however. “You’re not supposed to drink, but just like every other religion, there are reformed Mormons called Jack Mormons, and many of them do drink,” Meredith says in the preview.
Whitney says the “closet bar” is a thing in Utah. “You set up a bar in one of the closets so no one sees you drinking,” she explains.
Some stereotypes are true — many are not.
“There’s so many misconceptions about Mormons,” Lisa observes in the clip. “I think people think Mormons aren’t fun. I mean, I own a tequila brand. How can you say Mormons aren’t fun?”
Heather outlines some misconceptions other people ceaselessly have about Mormons: “That we’re polygamist, that we all percentage a husband, that women don’t work out of doors the home, and that all of us have six to 8 kids.” (“A lot of that’s true, even though,” she admits.)
One facet of Mormon culture that this spa owner can verify? The temple garments. “They’re a cap-sleeved blouse that you simply wear under your bra, that you tuck in,” she says. “And you wear these motorcycle shorts. It’s an outward symbol of your dedication to God. So if you don’t wear the sacred undies, you don’t love God.”
The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City premieres on Wednesday, Nov. 11, at 10 p.m. ET on Bravo.
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