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Winner, Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2017 Americans are
living longer and reinventing both work and retirement, but
Hollywood movies barely hint at this reality of contemporary
society. In many popular films, older characters fade into
irrelevance, inactivity, or absurdity, or else they stay in the
background as wise elders while younger characters provide the
action. Most American films do not attempt to portray the rich
variety of experiences or the sensitive aging issues that people
confront in the years beyond fifty. Fade to Gray offers one of the
first extended studies of the portrayal of older people in American
cinema from the silent era to the present. Writing in an accessible
style for both general audiences and scholars, Timothy Shary and
Nancy McVittie examine social attitudes toward aging through an
analysis of hundreds of individual films, including such classics
as You Can't Take It With You (1938), Rosemary's Baby (1968),
Grumpy Old Men (1993), and Nebraska (2013). They show how
representations of the aging process and depictions of older people
embracing or enduring the various experiences of longer lives have
evolved over the past century, as well as how film industry
practices have both reflected and influenced perceptions of aging
in American society. Exposing the social and political motivations
for negative cinematic portrayals of the elderly, Fade to Gray also
gives visibility to films that provide opportunities for better
understanding and appreciation of the aged and the aging process.
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