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Queen of Pop !为什么麦当娜不想--也没有必要“优雅的老去”?

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好文共赏


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Why Madonna Won’t (and Shouldn’t Have to) Act Her Age
Ever since Madonna became the hardworking, relentlessly ambitious pop star that she is, I assumed she’d one day age gracefully, transforming into elegant Old Hollywood royalty like Grace Kelly—one of many women who’ve influenced her myriad personae through the decades. I thought we’d be able to say, Wow, look how Madonna has let her face show its age and still be beautiful. Or, look how her body is still fierce yet dressed like a sophisticated adult.
The very opposite, of course, has happened. The 57-year-old Madonna is baring her bod, yes, but in tacky outfits that look pulled from the racks of Forever 21. Trying to insert herself into a music scene ruled by hip-hop, she’s even worn gold grills on her teeth. That’s why I’m still bothered by this summer’s New York Times article “Growing Older With Madonna.” In it, Jancee Dunn admits to watching with “queasy fascination [Madonna’s] attempts to navigate the undeniable fact that she is growing older before our eyes.” Yet she concedes, “Much of the hand-wringing around her age focuses on her lack of dignity. But she’s not a United Nations ambassador—she’s a pop star.”
Precisely. It’s this idea of “dignity,” and my own early desire to watch her age “gracefully,” that now grate on my notion of feminism. During Hollywood studio days, that might’ve been possible or preferable (e.g., Princess Grace, Katharine Hepburn). But now, during our Instagram age of Kardashian, TMZ, and Gawker, every gray hair and wrinkle—or ill-advised tweet—gets instantly relayed to our phones. And if you’re not playing along, there’s a chance you might not exist, which is death to a celeb.
Today this raises the question of what “graceful” even means, and according to whom? Dunn mentions the U.N.-ambassador path pioneered by Audrey Hepburn in the ’80s, lately followed by recovering bad girl Angelina Jolie. Noble, yes, but should it be the gold standard for women “past their prime?” Why force the do-gooder role onto a female star who has no interest in saving the world—or being any kind of role model, for that matter?
Hence the rude counterexample of Chrissie Hynde, whose new memoir, Reckless: My Life as a Pretender, describes a violent sexual encounter with a biker gang. She’s come under fire for defending herself thus: “If I’m walking around and I’m very modestly dressed and I’m keeping to myself and someone attacks me, then I’d say that’s his fault . . . But if I’m being very lairy and putting it about and being provocative, then you are enticing someone who’s already unhinged—don’t do that. Come on!”
Even fellow cool-rocker Lucinda Williams was incensed, but why should a ’70s punk like Hynde stop trying to offend, or apologize when she does? That’s like asking Madonna to dress modestly. Hynde never sought to be a feminist icon or a role model; as she recently told NPR, “I’m not here to embolden anyone.” Now that she’s older, why should we expect different of her? Both ageism and sexism are at work here. Keith Richards gets a pass, somehow, for his leering and drinking and smoking and flaunting his cadaverous wrinkles. And if his recent solo work consists of crooning insipid blues tunes in a Dylan-derivative voice, male critics will say he’s authentic, that he’s just being true to himself and his art. Nobody requires him to reinvent himself or age with dignity. (Hello, gold snakeskin jacket!) Meanwhile, very few women north of 40 (or 50, or 60 . . . ) are given such freedom by the media to show their miles of hard living. See: Hynde, Courtney Love, and even Williams—who, while aging seemingly without cosmetic assist or outlandish antics, sadly no longer fills big concert halls.


2025-07-19 10:50:28
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The exceptions are telling. Meryl Streep, for example, has always been known for being Meryl Streep, for the excellence of her brand—not its youthfulness. And no one can force a new career trajectory on her to avoid the supposed indignity of aging. Into the same category fall Helen Mirren and Patti Smith (coming here in January with her new book M Train). Lately playing Alzheimer’s and cancer victims, Julianne Moore is edging into the same space, even as she continues to model for Revlon. (Though she does refreshingly cop to her age in interviews, like it’s No Big Deal.)
Some women in showbiz go the other direction: embracing plastic surgery to gain a few extra years onscreen. For this they’re judged just as severely on social media, as was the case last year with Renée Zellweger’s relaunched face. We like a little work done well (think Emmylou Harris or Nicole Kidman), but cross that line and risk the wrath of media and fans. It’s a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t scenario. The obvious extreme here is Joan Rivers. Yet she managed to stay relevant precisely because she talked about her surgeries and her age, much as Amy Schumer can joke about her weight today. And Rivers was a trouper who never quit. Charlize Theron seems to be holding her own, sacrificing her beauty for good roles in Monster and Mad Max: Fury Road. But how much longer does she have; how many more movies will give her that freedom?
Others get lucky. The resurgent Stevie Nicks is filling stadiums again with Fleetwood Mac and mentoring Haim and Antebellum. Nicks hit bottom in the ’80s—puffy and zoned-out onstage, revolving in and out of rehab, getting pounded in the press. But even at her nadir—near the same time Jane Fonda was rebranding herself as a workout maven—Nicks stayed true to herself. Did she ever apologize? Does Madonna? Nicks’ new status as elder rock goddess reflects the fact that she never changed her brand. She’s still sporting her velvet black dresses and long, luminous hair. And when not doing cameos on American Horror Story, The Voice, and onstage with her young acolytes, she’s at home cuddling with her puppies. She’s marketing herself, but staying (shudder) age-appropriate.
And for those celebs who don’t want to be judged exclusively by the camera or box office, there’s the entrepreneurial new lifestyle/mommy track. Following in the formidable footsteps of Martha Stewart, we have Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop enterprise (a website promoting fashion, food, and healthy living) and Drew Barrymore’s Flower Beauty, a make-up and cosmetics line at Walmart. (Barrymore will be here November 7 to discuss her new memoir Wildflower with director Lynn Shelton.) If capitalizing on your (fading) looks and style seems like an innocuous pursuit, think again. Jessica Alba’s toxin-free home products line, Honest Company, is worth $1 billion.
From that success, as we know from Fonda’s fitness example, comes the backlash—which is no less sexist than dissing Madonna’s non-matronly style. Paltrow is viciously condemned by women and the media alike. And why—because she dares to monetize her fame? I don’t get the hate, and Madonna is again the paradigm here: Why would a woman who made a business—no, a multimillion-dollar empire—of chasing the latest trend, of upturning ideas of what it means to be a sexual female, of shape-shifting into personae to fit the times, not continue to seek relevance, fame, and fortune? And what’s more feminist than earning your own money?
So while I’ve mocked Paltrow’s “conscious uncoupling” from Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, I’m also really irked by the criticism of her choice to be a successful businesswoman, particularly in a landscape that isn’t doling out plum acting roles. In a Time interview this summer, she railed at how entrepreneurial women are negatively portrayed in the media. “I think you just put your nose to the grindstone and build your business,” she said. “You just keep going in hopes the story becomes not people pitting women against each other, which is not founded in truth. There’s no competition. You just get to f**king work!”
You just get to fucking work. Exactly. And work is a choice, just as coasting on your looks (for some young women) can be a choice. But there’s no requirement that such choices be ennobling or quote-unquote dignified. (How I hate that word.) And while I concede the Streep exception, “dignified” doesn’t really sell in our youth-obsessed, Twitter-ranked, Miley-besotted media culture.
Stardom rewards narcissism and self-centeredness, and those same qualities are finding new markets for women willing to adopt new career roles. This is not the same thing as maturity, nor should it be. “I hope you are as fun-loving and adventurous as me when you’re my age!!!! Hahahhahaha let’s see,” taunts Madonna on Instagram. Indeed.


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英语学前班的飘过


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胡萝卜的人要怎么优雅呢


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我居然看完了


  • Marcovelous
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因為婊子她是madonna
the alchemist也是說being adventurous誒


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字母都认不得的人路过不给翻译真素不努力


2025-07-19 10:44:28
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她从来都是优雅的


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英語爛到沒得救。。。居然還不帶翻譯


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心不老你叫她怎么老


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因为她是麦当娜


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求你们好好看看原文


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太长不看


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