I rented a video of Room at the Top the
other night—you know the one
with Lawrence Harvey as a poor young man hellbent on moving up in post-war
England, and Simone Signoret as the "older woman" he loves and leaves
for a young heiress? I settled in for a major cocooning evening, watching a
great old broad play out a doomed love affair.
But what was this? Signoret looked fabulous. Slim-waisted, sexy. Young. If I
saw her and this weeby Harvey guy together, I'd wonder
what she saw in him.
But
there she was—on screen—saying she was too old to be beautiful,
too old to start life over, too old to be loved. She was, she
"confessed"—thirty-fiiive!
I backed up the tape. Say that again, Simone? And she did.
Stunning. Did everybody back then think 35 was old? Or maybe the writer was
just far too young to be writing about grownups' lives. I wanted Signoret to
refuse to say the line, or to bust out laughing when she said it.
But I hadn't laughed when I first saw the film. Back then, the
idiot-who-was-me thought Signoret was old.
I got curious and rented Sunset Boulevard. That
one was about a really old woman and her young lover, right? So I'm watching
William Holden ask Gloria Swanson—"How old are you, 50?" and
I suddenly understand something weird about our times.
Here's
this powerful cultural programming that says 50-year-old women are grotesque
hags, tragically sidelined from their work and from the really important
thing—attracting men.