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The industry’s ageism was a symptom of a larger cultural sickness: the societal erasure of older women. If a woman’s value was tied exclusively to fertility and physical perfection, then a woman over 50 was invisible. When they did appear, they were often desexualized, dehumanized, or rendered as plot devices for younger protagonists.

While Viola Davis and Angela Bassett are thriving, the pool of roles for older Black, Latina, and Asian actresses remains shallow. The "Mammy" and "Dragon Lady" tropes are dying, but they are being replaced by a new problem: the "Strong Black Woman" archetype, which denies older Black actresses the vulnerability and softness afforded to their white counterparts. PervMom - Sienna Rae - Loving MILF Goes All Out...

The conventional wisdom held that audiences wanted to see youth. Mature women were relegated to the archetypal tropes of the nagging wife, the meddling mother-in-law, or the quirky grandmother providing comic relief. The industry’s ageism was a symptom of a

and Viola Davis (JuVee Productions) have followed suit. Davis, in particular, shattered records by winning an EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony). At 57, she played the formidable General Nanisca in The Woman King —a role that required brutal physical training and a regal authority that only a mature actress could provide. The Representation Gap: What Still Needs to Change Despite the progress, we must be careful not to declare victory. The "mature woman" boom is currently reserved for a very specific demographic: white, cisgender, slender, and wealthy. While Viola Davis and Angela Bassett are thriving,