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Nicole Kidman, at 55, has become the patron saint of this genre. From Big Little Lies (where her character, Celeste, survived domestic abuse and found new love post-40) to The Undoing and Being the Ricardos , Kidman is producing and starring in narratives where female desire and power are not curves that descend after age 30, but plateaus that rise.
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Similarly, The Last of Us gave us the quiet devastation of Nick Offerman and Murray Bartlett, but it is the older female characters—the fierce, survivalist Kathleen (Melanie Lynskey) and the matriarchal leader Maria (Rutina Wesley)—who show that desire, loyalty, and rage are not age-dependent. Nicole Kidman, at 55, has become the patron
Marlene Dietrich famously lamented that after 50, she was only offered roles as "a grandmother who makes chocolate cakes." Bette Davis, one of the fiercest talents of her generation, spent her later years fighting for roles that acknowledged her intelligence and sexuality, roles that simply weren't being written. Similarly, The Last of Us gave us the
recently highlighted the double standards in the industry, noting that while male actors are rarely shamed for aging, women frequently face trolling and marginalisation as they grow older. Despite these hurdles, icons like
O’Meara, J. (2019). “The older woman on screen: From invisibility to resurgence?” In Ageing, Gender, and Media: Representing Older People (pp. 85–102). Palgrave Macmillan.
Some notable mature women in entertainment and cinema: