Perhaps the most radical shift in the entertainment landscape is the normalization of senior sexuality. For decades, if a woman over 50 appeared on screen, she was de-sexualized—a nurse, a nun, or a nebulous "mom."
That trope is dead.
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There is a new cliché forming: the gun-wielding grandmother. While it is fun to see Helen Mirren pick up a rifle, writers must be careful not to replace "passive old lady" with "superhuman old lady." Mature women deserve quiet dramas, too—stories about illness, friendship, bankruptcy, and hope.
Mirren has been a trailblazer for forty years, but her late career is a masterclass in defiance. From playing The Queen to strapping on a utility belt in Fast & Furious 9, she refuses the "passive elder" role. She famously posed nude at 60, telling the world that desire does not have a birthday. These stories matter because they tell older women
The core product being sold is the juxtaposition of these two archetypes.
If there is a patron saint of the 2020s mature-woman renaissance, it is Jean Smart. Her turn as Deborah Vance in Hacks is a revelation. Deborah is a sixty-something Las Vegas comedian fighting for relevance. She is ruthless, sexual, insecure, and brilliant. The show doesn't ask us to admire her despite her age; it asks us to admire her because of the hard-won wisdom of her age.