• The public is increasingly "open" to stories featuring women over fifty, according to our partner The Conversation.

  • Many TV series pay attention to aging heroines in search of themselves and new lives.

  • The analysis of this phenomenon was carried out by Monika Siejka, teacher-researcher in storytelling, leadership and management.

When Piper, the heroine of

Orange is the New Black

, discovers the world of prison, she learns that alongside groups identified as "the Blacks" or "the Latinas", there are the "Old Women".

The latter are considered unclassifiable, regardless of their community, they are "the ones to which no one pays attention".

Because if there is a biological age, the social age categorizes.

To quote Bourdieu: “the border between youth and old age is in all societies an issue of struggle.

», An issue of representation.

From this point of view, these old women seem to have lost the fight.

The "old" prisoners of Orange is the New Black © Allociné (screenshot)

The finding is severe.

However, beyond the devoted grandmothers (

Suits

) or the nasty stepmothers (

Desperate Housewives

), the richness of the roles leaves much to be desired.

We observe a majority of secondary characters who represent the evolution of the population neither in percentage nor in diversity.

Several famous actresses denounce this invisibility.

In France, the AAFA (Actrices et Acteurs de France Associés) publishes statistics which prove this anger.

However, it seems that the series offer spaces more open to diversity.

Many actresses express themselves in roles that question the stereotypes linked to the aging of women.

The fight is organized around key points that we will define.

Refuse ageism or the lack of roles

In

Hamishim

(the number 50) Alona, ​​screenwriter, refuses to rejuvenate her fiftieth anniversary heroine as requested by the producers, for whom "it is too much to ask from the spectators". Grace, 70 in

Grace

and

Frankie

, yells at the salesperson who stubbornly ignores her in favor of a young client. These two series point to ageism: an attitude of negative prejudices towards the aging process and the elderly, defined by Butler.

More specifically, they are interested in the perception of aging in women, tenacious in misogynistic prejudices. From the outset of fertility, women would enter into a form of decline described by Freud or Weiniger. Simone de Beauvoir herself speaks harshly of her 50th birthday. "I understand the Castiglione who had smashed all her mirrors," she wrote there.

The cinema has made it a sub-genre of horror, hagsploitation ("hag" meaning "old skin") dominated by the character of the hysterical old woman, codified in

Who Killed Baby Jane?

(1962). But what other proposed roles do women in general receive? Joan Crawford (Jessica Lange) on the set of Baby Jane that relates the

Feud

series , is categorical: "only ingenuous, mothers or gorgons"

The finding turns out to be all the more cruel since it is gendered, because it is less eliminatory for men.

We find on the screen the double standard of aging enunciated by Susan Sontag, which manifests itself in the imbalance of couples.

A mature actor is associated with a partner aged 20 to 30 years his junior, as the film

Eiffel

showed again recently .

Playing with the crippling menopause stereotype

Internalized as a degradation, the menopause marks a difficult border crossing for the heroines.

Alona (in

Hamishim

) becomes depressed, Gemma in

Sons of Anarchy

becomes angry and assaults a young rival.

None regrets the possibility of motherhood, but all experience the “fear of expiration” to quote Mona Chollet.

On the other hand, late pregnancy represents a jubilant social questioning on the fictional level.

Jean's pregnancy in

Sex Education

arouses the irrepressible anger of her otherwise open-minded son.

That of the septuagenarian Nona in

Nona and her daughters

upsets all the codes until the unexpected.

This type of pregnancy mischievously refers to an aging body, but alive and to an active female sexuality, thus shaking up many stereotypes.

Come out of the cliché of the unworthy old lady

Among these clichés, there is that of the unworthy old woman.

Widowed, Ruth in

Six Feet Under

is torn between her old roles as mother and wife, and her urge to break free from patriarchy.

Like the

Old Lady unworthy

of Brecht, realizing the time devoted to her family, she wants to live as she sees fit, in the time that remains to her.

He will have to fight and accept to displease his own children.

To displease is not a priori a problem for Olive in

Olive Kitteridge

, who defends her choice of life, not without some funny settling of scores with decorum.

On the contrary, Martha, Castle

's whimsical and unconventional mother

, twirls around and leads those around her by the tip of her nose like her romantic relationships.

Stricter, but just as determined, the Dowager Countess Crawley traversed the eras of

Downton Abbey

without ceding an inch of ground.

So many figures of grandmothers who do not withdraw and leave conventions without fearing those around them.

Violet Crawley does not let it be told © Allociné (via The Conversation)

Claiming a relationship with the body without taboos

Difficulties in locomotion, rheumatism, osteoarthritis… In

Grace and Frankie

, the relationship with the aging body is approached without taboos with humor.

But it is also a living body, which wants to be sexually active and when the series speaks directly of vibrator and lubricant.

She also questions the relationship to "appearing young" by regularly shaking up the iconic figure of Jane Fonda.

A make-up removal scene thus challenges the viewer when the heroine takes off her makeup to repel the love of a younger man.

Indeed, this scene echoes the image of the witch associated with the old woman.

Its unveiling, as in

Shining

or in

GOT

, aims to elicit hindsight or even abjection *.

A cliché that Ozark

deconstructs

where Darlene, an unscrupulous murderer in her late teens, begins a romantic relationship with a young man barely out of adolescence and also wants to adopt a baby. The authenticity of his feelings wavers the resistance of opponents to his life project.

Because it is the freedom of choice that these series talk about.

In

Ten Percent

, the production initially refuses Sigourney Weaver to play a love affair with a young actor.

The actress protests: “if I were a man, they would have chosen an actress twice as young without hesitation.

No one would have been shocked.

"What will understand very well the" old "impresario of the agency, Arlette, as free as she is fine, in a staging intended to open the eyes of the director as of the spectators on the omnipresence of the stereotypes.

At 70, Sigourney Weaver wants to have a choice.

Our "OLD AGE" file

Ask the question of living together

We've shown that many shows pay attention to these aging heroines in search of themselves and new lives. Going beyond the traditional functions assigned to them, they seek to find other forms of balance. Grace lives with Frankie, Ruth with Sarah and Bettina (

Six Feet Under

). Some learn to accompany each other in a benevolent sorority which is not without evoking the principles of the House of Babayagas of Thérèse Clerc. Nona, the matriarch of

Nona and her daughters

, holds a real discourse on the happiness of living by accepting all the othernesses as so many possibilities of life.

Many paths remain to be explored.

If ageism persists, the success of these series shows that Alona (

Hamishim

) should not give in and rejuvenate her heroine because there are many beautiful stories to be told about women over fifty, and an audience of more and more to hear them.

Science

"Lady Sapiens": Is the image of prehistoric women (really) distorted in this documentary?

Health

Old age: Maintaining an active sex life is good for the morale and health of seniors

This analysis was written by Monika Siejka, lecturer-researcher in storytelling, leadership and management at the University of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ) - Paris-Saclay University.


The original article was published on The Conversation website.

  • Old age

  • Actress

  • The Conversation

  • Feminism

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