1.4.2010 @ 3:47 pm UTC by lilah wild
Last published May 2004. Updated with more fabulous women!
Culture at large has always had a fixation on youth. Note the dearth of older women on TV who play roles other than wife or mother. The strange looks a woman still gets when she dates/marries a much younger man. The industry of expensive and painful surgeries promoted to help women look younger. And, after pushing youth as the ultimate in attractiveness, ridiculing women – who always must be pretty! – for trying to hang on to it. Even through we’re living in a post-Sex and the City world, where women living it up in their 40’s should be no big deal, popular culture still has a long way to go towards welcoming women over the threshold of thirty – or even “The Big 2-5.”
But the subcultures, which already snicker at the follies of conventionality, don’t have quite the same knee-jerk disdain for aging – probably because there are more ways to define success other than “finding a man” and raising children: art, dance, magick, design, history, travel, and music – pursuits sorely lacking space in mainstream women’s magazines, which seem to devote 90% of their content to 300 overpriced looks for spring and retreading fellatio techniques. Is it any wonder some of us crave a lifestyle that’s a little more substantial? (So now, when someone brings on the attitude of “aren’t you a little old for that goth stuff?“ you can officially look at them like they’re crazy.)
Women over 25 are older, wiser, seasoned. They have more experience and know more secrets. These women are the fierce black widows, the wise witches, the skilled dommes. Think back to the glamour icons of yesteryear: Marlene Dietrich. Joan Crawford. Barbara Stanwyck. Even Marilyn Monroe was past 30 at the height of her fame. In looking though tons of gothic fashion catalogs, I’ve noticed that the younger kids dressing up in long velvet sorceress dresses tend to look like they’re wearing Mommy’s clothes, while the older ones look completely comfortable and quite regal in long flowing gowns, shapely corsets, pieces that are more commanding than cute. They look like they belong on thrones. Age, through knowledge and experience, has earned them the right to be there.
It’s sometimes all too easy to forget that growing older is not such a bad thing when you’re bombarded by ads, movies, countless images that glorify youthful beauty and rarely any other kind. So, the next time something happens to make you feel bad about your age, remember you’re in a lot of really, really good company:
- Marie Laveau began her training to become a voodoo queen at age 25.
- Tori Amos was 29 when “Silent All These Years” became her first hit.
- Wendy O. Williamsstarted the Plasmatics when she was 29. The obscenity charges didn’t start happening until she was 32.
- Bettie Page was 29 when she first started appearing in pinup magazines.
- Vivienne Westwood opened her first fashion boutique “Let it Rock” at the age of 30, and would not get into the official “punk” fashion of SEX until she was 34.
- Cassandra Peterson came up with her persona of Elvira at 30, and was 37 when she starred in Mistress of the Dark.
- Cyndi Lauper was 30 when she released She’s So Unusual and rocked that awesome red vintage getup in in “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun.”
- Dita Von Teese scored the cover of Playboy at age 30.
- The Wilson sisters of Heart were in their early to mid 30’s when their singles repeatedly hit the Top 10. And went for totally unrestrained 80’s glamour in their videos.
- Maila Nurmi was 31 when she attended a masquerade party dressed as a Charles Addams cartoon character – and sparked her career as horror hostess Vampira.
- Lynn Breedlove started all-dyke punk band Tribe 8 at the age of 31, questioning gender dynamics and breaking out the infamous rubber penis during performances.
- Stevie Nicks was 33 when she released Bella Donna in 1981, firmly establishing her solo career and infectious fairy-gypsy fashion sense.
- Tairrie B started My Ruin in her mid 30’s – when she also broadcasted her unapologetic femme manifesto in the video for “Terror.”
- Debbie Harry was 35 when Blondie’s “Call Me” hit #1.
- Mary Woronov murdered swingers in the cult classic Eating Raoul at the age of 39.
- Anjelica Huston was 40 when she played Morticia Addams.
- Kim Gordon spent The Year Punk Broke turning 38, and was 42 when Sonic Youth headlined Lollapalooza in 1995.
- Martha Graham was 42 when she started a new form of contemporary dance through the dark themes of “Chronicle.”
- While the show pokes fun at fortysomethings still trying to crash the most glamorous parties and hang onto their youth, Absolutely Fabulous totally rocks for shameless champagne-guzzler Patsy Stone, supposedly age 47.
- Betsey Johnson is over 60 and continues to cartwheel down the catwalk every season.
- Still amazing: Nina Hagen(54), Dinah Cancer (49), Doro Pesch (45), Siouxsie Sioux(52), Joan Jett (51), Kathleen Hanna (41), Sabina Classen (46), Julie Strain (47), Jarboe (mid-50’s), Diamanda Galas(54).
(Have I missed anybody? Leave them in the comments!)
being a woman • getting older permalink
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11.16.2009 @ 4:12 pm UTC by lilah wild
Dear Brian:
I’ve just seen your latest video, “Running to the Edge of the World.”
Congratulations on your latest incarnation: total douchebag.
I very patiently waited for you to wrestle your demons and get back to work – you were at your best when you played in the mythical and abstract, holding up a mirror to society’s hypocrisy. You’re not a stupid guy – especially in the way you handled the blame for Columbine. I was so curious to see how the mind that created Antichrist Superstar would mature, what you would have to say from an older, wiser perspective.
I suffered through your terrible attempts at cabaret, felt mortified for your coattailing the lolita trend and how you had to show the world, so tastefully, that you can still get hot young chicks. At that point, you really needed to take a break from music. Write novels, take up oil painting, see how your creativity would manifest in another artistic direction. Go on a 6-week opium binge. Travel the world. Something transformative where you’d come back with new things to say.
But no. You went the celebrity route.
You’re still trying for that unsettling persona, trying to stay larger than life. Has anyone ever told you it’s OK to be human? I’ll tell you. Brian, it’s OK to be human. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but YouTube and reality TV have sucked the mystique out of all our icons. There will be no more rockstars – you were the last one. And you’re still hanging on, and you’re making a fool out of yourself.
I know I’m late to the party on this, but forgive me, after hearing your latest album, I wasn’t exactly in a hurry to see it.
Well, I did.
And I’m done with you.
(Not linking to the video, besides everybody’s probably seen it already anyway.)
That mirror, the one that used to reveal the world’s barbarity, has now been turned on you.
How on earth is this any kind of transgressive? For many women, this is Tuesday night. Oh, but wait, it’s supposed to be sexxxay.
You’ve had your head up Hollywood’s ass for so long, you no longer relate to your fans. Many of whom are female. Many of whom are getting together on the internet to discuss how goddamned scary it is to leave an abusive boyfriend. This video made my scars twitch. Damn straight you no longer have anything to say to me.
What’s really sad about all this is that you have fame, you have support. You have amazing resources at your disposal, you can broadcast any random brainfart you wish to the attention of millions. You could have done anything you wanted, and this is the artistic statement you chose: I hate my ex-girlfriend! Waaaaaah!
Keep slapping on that white foundation, Brian. You’ll learn someday it can’t cover up the stench of banality.
scorn and pity,
Lilah
being a woman • idiots • marilyn manson permalink
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11.12.2009 @ 8:03 pm UTC by lilah wild

A few weeks ago, Stray and I found ourselves in Disney World through some delightfully unscheduled travel plans. It’s not the kind of place we’d pick for a vacation – we’re more inclined to go running around a city than stay at a resort – but we’re not ones to turn down trips that pop up out of thin air. We had three days to get through the Magic Kingdom (Disneyland is better), Disney’s Hollywood Studios (total letdown – damn you, Tower of Terror!), and Epcot/the World Showcase (which was surprisingly the most fun out of all of them, noshing our way around the lake beneath the fireworks). The Magic Kingdom was first – it had to be, it’s the park that’s dug its glittery little claws into every pre-adolescent imagination since 1971.
And its sharpest talon? Cinderella’s Castle, of course.
My genre appetite loves the worlds of fairies and witches and enchanted woods, especially the art of Mary Blair, and the neat things they’ve been doing with those dream suites lately; my punk conscience snarls at a megacorporation yanking on children’s dreams and parents’ heartstrings to hawk oodles of merchandise. According to Royal Table restaurant where children can dine with the characters. There was a long line for lunch when we walked in, and opposite the restaurant door was something else going on: a Snow White, a photographer’s flash, a very cute room done up femme baroque (hard to see, there were a ton of people blocking the way), a little Belle dress on a tiny dummy. Not a boutique, although it looked like one – turns out it’s the lobby where families can get their picture taken with Cinderella while waiting for a table to open up. I thought about what it would be like to be five or six, taken into whole sparkling world, and how it would blow a little girl’s mind: All this, for ME?
This kicked off a long discussion about what we’d do if we had kids, would this be something we’d bring our hypothetical daughter to? In spite of all my reservations, yeah, I would. How could I say no, when she’d be going to school and all the other little girls would have the backpacks, the pencils, the sneakers? Not only would I be holding her back from her peer group, forbidding it would just make her want it more.
And, it’s not totally bad.
One point in the Princess Phenomenon’s favor is the validation it confers on girls, who are all too quickly going to get their confidence bulldozed as they grow up: You’re too fat! Play dumb or boys won’t like you! Whatever you do, you’re not good enough! My cousin took her kid to Disneyland a few years ago and gave her daughter a blank book to collect the princesses’ autographs. They went to the grove where all the princesses were hanging out, and her daughter went up to Cinderella, asking for her autograph; Cinderella replied by asking her for her autograph. According to my cousin, her daughter’s face just lit up that anybody would think her autograph was worth collecting – Cinderella, of all people.
Childhood is a precious window of time for something this special to be enjoyed to its absolute fullest, and I wouldn’t want her to miss it.
And, being a princess means getting to run around an amusement park in a ballgown. Considering how much of my wardrobe is devoted to slinking around in the dark, I think that’s rather cool.
So, given the flamboyant turns my own fashion tastes have taken, and how strong a sense of self I’d want her to have, here’s how I’d go about the princess thing, if I had a daughter:
- First, I’d watch all the movies with her. Let her see all the princesses so she can pick her favorite from all of them, not the first one she sees. Then find out why she likes that particular one.
- On to the dress. There’s no way I’d buy one from Disney – too flimsy, too cheap. Instead, I’d go poking around the catalogs of costumers who do kids’ things, and have something high-quality whipped up for her. Something that not just looks better, but will withstand all the running around she’s bound to do. And machine washable.
- This is one of those things that’s going to happen or it’s not, but I’d certainly try: instead of having her dress like her favorite princess, I’d try to encourage to have her own dress, just for her, nobody else has one like it. I’d sit down with her, look through a bunch of different styles and find out what she likes, and get it done in her favorite color. Teach her to be herself, not somebody else.
- It might seem ridiculous to teach her accessorizing this young, but the fashion industry is setting its sights on a younger and younger demographic these days. I’d try and get the dress plain with some fairy wings, some ribbony sashy stuff, some play jewelry, and teach her that she doesn’t have to buy a bunch of dresses to have a lot of outfits – just move some pieces around to make it a little bit different every day.
- I’d tell her that the pretty dress is just the beginning – go play in it. Go get dirty, go learn things. Don’t laze around on a throne thinking that’s all you need to do to be valued, don’t wait around for some guy to be your prince, go be your own hero.
- If I had my own yard (boy, we’re really climbing into the realms of pure fantasy here), I’d build her a treehouse. (It was at this point in the discussion that we were up in the Swiss Family Robinson thing, and I was loving the prim Victorian bed nestled in the branches of a gigantic tree). Bring her flowery teacups, make potions with her. Dig up all sorts of strange and pretty little things, china cats, music boxes, seashells. Give her the foundations of what would later become, if she chooses to go that way, an altar. And if not, lots of childhood mementos for her to hang onto later in life, if she wants.
- Teach her that the villains kind of had a point in that if beauty was what got you adoration and castles, then no wonder they were angling so hard for it. That they were women of action, not passive. That she has a lot of strengths and talents within herself. That witches are just as wonderful as princesses. And that she doesn’t have to be evil to be fabulous.
And I’d take her to Cinderella’s Castle. I’d want her to know, before the cultural attack on her self-esteem gets underway: yes, all this, for you.
alt parenting • being a woman • disney permalink
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