Bodies: Culture Shift
- All the Sexy Older Ladies
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All the Sexy Older Ladies
From βHacksβ to βQueen Sugar,β pop culture begins spotlighting the sexuality of women over 50.
As the editor of a magazine that covers aging, I often receive pitches about the βinvisibilityβ of older women. Invisibility out in the world, where others tend to stop noticing us and start talking over us.
And invisibility in film and television, where , and women older than 40 tend to be portrayed as dowdy and asexual, if not downright disgusting.
At 57, I find this resonates. Since my mid-40s, Iβve drawn progressively less attention in publicβon the street, in stores, and in bars and restaurants. While that might not sound catastrophic, less sexual attention can mean less social power, which is the only power weβre afforded in the first place. We live in a patriarchal, sexist society that values women more for their appearance than other attributes, like skill and intelligence. Add ageism to sexism, and people inhabiting aging female bodies arenβt highly valued.
Women often feel from their 40s on that theyβre seen as less relevant, says Gina Frangello, the 53-year-old author of . βThe lessened sexual-attention component can be a blessing, a curse, or both. But the blessing part is, in my view, also due to gross ways of conceptualizing women in the patriarchy.β
I keep wondering what happened to the talented actresses who were prominent when I was growing up. Why are most of the older actresses I see on screen cast in marginal roles? Women are given less dialogue in films the older they get, and per β,β a 2020 report compiled by the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, βFemale characters 50+ are more likely than male characters 50+ to be shown as senile, homebound, feeble, and frumpy.β
Representations on television are crucial because they influence our everyday perceptions and interactions, including how we relate to older people, and they shape how we each see ourselves growing old.
Representation matters, says Alana Officer, head of the World Health Organizationβs Demographic Change and Healthy Ageing unit. βRepresentations on television are crucial because they influence our everyday perceptions and interactions, including how we relate to older people, and they shape how we each see ourselves growing old.β
Too often, older women are misrepresented, says Frangello. βRepresentations of older women are almost always about someone βgetting her groove backβ because itβs gone, or as some teachable moment to illustrate how out of it the older woman is.β She cites , last yearβs , as showing its 50-something characters as βimbeciles.β For example, βMiranda has been an attorney in Manhattan her entire adult life and spent much of a season in the original series with a Black boyfriend, but now she doesnβt know there are Black college professors who might have braids?β
While this larger observation rings true, in recent years Iβve noticed a slight shift in the other direction, wherein a handful of middle-aged and older actresses portray self-possessed, vibrant charactersβpowerful, complicated, multifaceted humans who happen to also be sexual beings, both desirous of and desirable to others. And theyβre being paired with younger partners, counter to the common trope of older men in relationships with much younger women.
I heard myself shouting βYes!β at my television recently when, in Season 2 of , Deborah Vance, played by 71-year-old Jean Smart, has a one-night stand with a much younger man. Itβs unsettling when we first see Deborah meet Jason (played by 44-year-old Devon Sawa) at a bar. Is this guy a swindler, like Brad Pittβs character in Thelma & Louise? Is he a serial killer?
βWhat, do you have a fetish for older women?β she asks Jason. βI guess I do. I like older women, is that a bad thing?β he replies. She goes back to his place and we witness a perfectly lovely, mutually respectful roll in the hay. No big dealβjust an older woman on the road having a good time, getting some needs met from a younger dude, then going home and getting on with her life.
Ava DuVernayβs offers another positive portrayal of an older woman. At nearly 60, βAunt Vi,β played by Tina Lifford, has a younger fiancΓ©, Hollywood Desonier, played by 46-year-old Omar J. Dorsey. Vi and Hollywood are hot for each other. Theyβre often shown displaying affection and sneaking off into the bedroom whenever the mood strikes. I love this for Vi.
Then thereβs 51-year-old Sandra Ohβs character in , security operative Eve Polastri, who becomes mutually obsessed with assassin Villanelle, played by 29-year-old Jodie Comer. Eveβmarried in a straight relationship and in midlifeβis lustful for and desired by a much younger woman, discovering a new facet to her sexuality. Most recently, Iβve been heartened by , a film featuring 63-year-old Emma Thompson as a recent widow whoβs been sexually frustrated all her life, never once achieving orgasm. She hires a young sex worker, played by 29-year-old Daryl McCormack, to help her locate her libido. How empowering to see an older woman who has been so sexually repressed find the courage to ask for that help. Itβs a testament to the inherent power of honesty and vulnerability.
Although uplifting examples, such roles are still few and far between. And how important are on-screen changes, anyway? Frangello points out that visibility is just one of many problems facing women in post-Roe America. βWe live in a moment when thereβs a lot going on that can neutralize womenβs efforts to attain so-called equality in every realm because we are too busy trying to put out 900-alarm dumpster fires and trying to convince men in power that we are, you know, actually human,β she says.
But I see these issues as intertwined. As long as weβre marginalized in the media, itβll be difficult for us to politically command the respect we deserve. So hereβs to more portrayals of older women as fullβand lustyβhuman beings, and all the power that brings with it.
Sari Botton
is the author of And You May Find Yourself β¦ Confessions of a Late-Blooming Gen-X Weirdo. She publishes Oldster Magazine.
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