Helen Mirren looking
resplendent – as ever – for L’Oreal. Photograph: Simon Emmett
for L'Oréal Paris Age Perfect
Helen
Mirren at 70: fashion gifts from a grande dame
Her
70th birthday is just around the corner, but the celebrated actor
shows no signs of slowing down, shutting up or becoming invisible. We
salute her fearless approach to fashion
Alyson Walsh
@thatsntmyage
Wednesday 22 July
2015 12.02 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2015/jul/22/helen-mirren-70-fashion-gifts-grande-dame?CMP=fb_gu
How brilliant is
Helen Mirren? Allow me to count the ways. Take the fact she thinks
sexism and ageism in Hollywood is “fucking outrageous” and will
say so often to whoever is listening. And the fact that, at 70 years
old this Saturday, she isn’t planning to retire any time soon,
having gone successfully from stage to screen and back again in a
career spanning almost 50 years. Later this year, she’ll be
appearing as 1940s gossip columnist Hedda Hopper in the film Trumbo
and intelligence officer Colonel Katherine Powell in the military
thriller Eye in the Sky. The winner of one Tony, four Baftas, four
Emmys and an Oscar, the feisty, London-born actress is a trailblazing
force to be reckoned with and has no intention of slowing down,
shutting up or becoming invisible. Dare to mess with Mirren and risk
an expletive-ridden audience with the Queen. She has also been a
long-time style crush of mine, and theses are the fashion gifts she
has bestowed upon us.
Real women wear
sleeves
When high-street
bigwigs believed that mature women wanted piddly shoestring straps,
the grande dame soon put them straight. “There are no dresses with
sleeves, and we need to bring back the sleeve: fine, see-through
ones, long or short.” Her campaign for better coverage and the
right not to bare arms has made dresses with sleeves more desirable.
Result.
Seventy is awesome
We all know growing
old isn’t for cissies, but at least Mirren makes it look like fun.
She’s proof that confidence comes with age and experience. “I
used to worry a lot more about my looks than I do now – when you’re
young and beautiful, you’re paranoid and miserable. I think the
great advantage of getting older is that you let go of certain
things.” There’s a strength in older women who remain engaged and
relevant and visible that’s empowering to women of all ages – and
incredibly attractive. Beauty brand L’Oreal obviously thought so
when they signed Mirren as the face of their Age Perfect Campaign in
October 2014. And the award for age-positive role model goes to ...
Do forget your
luggage
Taking travelling
light to a whole new level, Mirren once admitted that she only takes
underwear on holiday: she heads straight to a charity shop on arrival
to buy the rest of her holiday wardrobe, then drops it all off again
before catching a flight home. No suitcase, no surcharge, donating to
charity – this could be the single greatest budget-airline-defying
travel plan. I can’t believe it hasn’t caught on.
Ruling the red
carpet with majestic grace, Mirren makes eveningwear look easy. The
figure-hugging cocktail dress (often in a The Cook, The
Thief-inspired shade of scarlet or green), the statement earrings,
the versatile mussed-up or slicked-back bob, the woosh of red
lipstick. The look is elegant, chic and not overdone. A fan of Dolce
& Gabbana frocks, Mirren has found her style and knows what suits
her. She continues to refresh and refine her wardrobe and experiment
with playful prints, dress silhouettes and the occasional pink rinse.
All of which helps her look modern and self-assured. For a night on
the town, just follow her advice from the Tony awards: “Stairs,
heels, drink – lethal combination.”
Alyson Walsh is the
author of Style Forever: The Grown-Up Guide to Looking Fabulous,
published by Hardie Grant. She blogs as That’s Not My Age and
tweets at @thatsntmyage
'Helen Mirren is so gorgeous
that men of all ages will look at a photo of her, perhaps in a
swimsuit, and make a comment along the lines of: actually, they
wouldn’t mind.' Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
Helen
Mirren shows women can age beautifully, but we shouldn’t have to
Christina Patterson
/Helen Mirren
Wednesday 29 October
2014 12.00 GMT /
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/29/helen-mirren-women-age-beautifully-tv-bosses
It’s
great to have a gorgeous woman like Mirren as a ‘new face’ of
anything, but you shouldn’t have to be beautiful to be allowed in a
public arena or on TV
“One of my biggest
regrets,” said the writer Nora Ephron, “is that I didn’t spend
my youth staring lovingly at my neck.” When she looked in a mirror,
she explained, she would pull the skin back and “stare wistfully at
a younger version” of herself. She might, she said, be “wise and
sage and mellow”, but she still tried to avert her eyes. She wrote
this in an essay, and a book, called I Feel Bad About My Neck.
Some of us might be
tempted to write an essay called I Feel Bad About the Weird Lines on
Either Side of My Mouth or I Feel Bad That I Look Worried Even When
I’m Not. But if Helen Mirren has ever been tempted to write an
essay like this, she hasn’t shown much sign of it. What she did
say, when she was made the new face of L’Oréal this week, was that
she hoped she would “inspire other women towards greater
confidence” by making the most of their looks. “I am not
gorgeous,” she said. “I never was, but I was always OK looking
and I’m keen to stay that way.”
If Mirren isn’t
gorgeous, then heaven help the rest of us. Most people think she’s
as gorgeous as the Cleopatra she once played. Mirren is so gorgeous
that men of all ages will look at a photo of her, perhaps in a
swimsuit, and make a comment along the lines of: actually, they
wouldn’t mind. They do, it’s true, sometimes say this as if they
expect someone to give them a medal. They seem to think that
expressing sexual interest in a woman over the age of 50 – in a
woman, in fact, who’s 69 – is smashing some law of nature, and
perhaps a Guinness record.
In this,
unfortunately, they might be right. According to recent research from
OKCupid, one of the largest dating agencies in the world, women are
mostly attracted to men of their own age. Men of all ages are
attracted to women in their 20s. And aren’t very good at maths. No
wonder some American actors seems to feel pressured into having some
pretty radical work. It might seem like less hassle than sitting down
to write I Feel Bad About My Face.
But Mirren, thank
the Lord, doesn’t feel bad about her face. She doesn’t have a
beauty routine. She doesn’t look like someone who has had work
done. She looks like a woman who has lived a bit, and laughed a lot,
and who knows she has been lucky in her looks, but also knows that
how you look is a pretty small part of who you are. She looks, in
fact, like a woman who is happy in her skin. “The weird thing is,”
she says, “you get more comfortable in yourself, even as time is
giving you less reason for it. When you’re young and beautiful,
you’re paranoid and miserable. And then you’re older and it’s
ironic.”
Yes, it is ironic
that as you get older, and happier, and more at ease with how you
look, and who you are, that’s when the world doesn’t seem to want
to put you in places where you might be seen. Women who are 65 to 79,
according to the Annual Population Survey, are likely to “report
significantly higher ratings of feeling worthwhile and happiness than
any other age group”. But no one ever gets to hear about this
because as they get happier, their market value plummets. The rule
seems to be that if you’re over 60 and want your photo in the
paper, and you’re not called Helen Mirren, you’d better be called
Joanna Lumley.
From TV, the message
is clear. If you want someone to tell you about the world, what you
need is a white-haired man. These men – like Jeremy Paxman (64),
David Dimbleby (76) and John Simpson (70) – will often be referred
to as middle-aged, as if they were expected to have the life span of
an Old Testament prophet. Women, on the other hand, as Miriam
O’Reilly discovered when she was booted out of Countryfile, are
older at 50. Only 18% of TV presenters are women over the age of 50.
If you want to work in TV, and still have a job when the grey hairs
start, you should probably get good at baking cakes.
On Tuesday, Fran
Unsworth, the deputy director of BBC news and current affairs, told a
hearing of the House of Lords communications committee that
broadcasters had assumed people didn’t want to watch older women on
TV without actually working out whether it was true. She was
speaking, by the way, on behalf of an organisation that runs on
almost £4bn of public funds.
So, let’s make it
clear: we do. We don’t want to switch on our TVs, or open our
newspapers, and feel that any woman who looks like a woman has been
bundled out of sight, in case a child should see her crow’s feet
and scream. We’d quite like to think that the work we do to shape
the world is sometimes seen. We would, in other words, quite like to
think that when you see a wrinkle on a woman’s face, or a creased
neck, or a worried frown, it’s not just to advertise a cream.
• The headline and
standfirst of this article were amended shortly after publication at
the writer’s request.
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