The photographer found that this helped put her subjects at ease, and built a frankness and trust between them conducive to making the series work. Instagram also proved very useful in Odette’s quest, and it was via the app that she discovered a world of older, loosely connected influencers whom she was quick to contact.īefore taking photographs, Odette would talk to the models about their lives, their relationships to their bodies and to others’, their romantic and sexual partners, and even more taboo subjects like vaginal dryness and menopause. After photographing her first subject, Sylviane, Odette found that the more images she accumulated, the more material she could show her prospective models to reassure them: “I think people can see there’s nothing degrading in my pictures.” The initial shoots for the series that was to become ‘Belles Mômes’ (Beautiful Girls ) took place in a studio where Odette had previously worked as a life model. Ultimately, it was thanks to word-of-mouth that Odette’s project finally gathered steam. ![]() And the fact that I’d started the project during Covid didn’t help.” I was putting up ads in the street, anywhere I could. She had her work cut out for her - finding women over fifty is one thing, convincing them to get undressed in front of a camera is quite another. With the outbreak of the pandemic, Odette resolved to seek out older women to take part in her long-deferred project. Still Doing It follows the lives of these nine extraordinary older women as well as this society's complex relationship to aging with surprising and revelatory results.The carpool stuck in her mind until in 2020. Even the two churchgoing African American great grandmothers, Juanita and Elaine, featured in the film are redefining themselves as they age. The doc thus illustrates the reality that while many older women are still reluctant to speak about their personal lives there is a new vanguard of women over 65 who came into their own later in life and have taken that strong sense of themselves and their sexuality into their older age. Entering these past decades reminds us that these times were far more radical than the conservative times we are living in now. Archival footage, stills and music are integrated to take the audience from the 1940s and 1950's to the explosive energy of the women's movement and the sexual revolution. Still Doing It.not only delves into each woman's personal history but also into the broader history these women lived through. Ellen revels in her relationship with Dolores, and as an activist fights to ensure that older gays and lesbians are not forced back into the closet in nursing homes and senior centers. For her the women's movement rescued her from an isolation that began as a child when she realized she was attracted to girls and culminated when her strong feelings for women finally made her realize she had to get a divorce. It is why she endured the pain of leaving her good, but sexually unsatisfying marriage. For Ellen, who was a model 1950’s suburban housewife, sexuality is central. We also follow lesbian partners Ellen and Dolores who met each other in their 60’s. Betty's life (and her humor) stand not only in defiance of the sexual compliance expected of women, but as a reminder that what is really happening is often far more interesting than the limited scenarios the media create. We also meet sex expert Betty Dodson who met her boyfriend Eric, 47 years her junior, in cyberspace when she was 69. ![]() ![]() ![]() We meet Ruth who met her husband Harry after 30 years of dating hell Harriet, a writer and bohemian who continues to see sex as the core of her life and Freddie, who enjoyed the best sex of her life with her third husband Syd. Aware that many people see her as "nothing but an old woman," she is defiant in living life on her own terms. Frances, 87, continues to enjoy a palpably sexual relationship with journalist David Steinberg, the love of her life she met at 80. Still Doing It reveals the wonderful truth that many older women are actually beginning intense romantic relationships after 65. Women over 65 are already the fastest growing segment of the population and when the baby boomers begin to turn 65 in 2011 their numbers will swell. Outspoken for their generation these women mark a sea change. Partnered, single, straight, gay, black and white, nine extraordinary women, 67-87, express with startling honesty and humor how they feel about themselves, sex and love in later life and the poignant realities of aging. Flying in the face of this culture’s extreme ageism, Still Doing It explores the lives of older women.
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