How to be sexy in your 50s and beyond

How did you celebrate your 57th birthday? Maybe with a trip to the doctor to stock up on HRT, or a gentle Pilates class. What you probably didn’t do is chuck on a tiny pink chainmail dress held together with gold clips, and post the evidence on Instagram. This is because you are not Elizabeth Hurley, a woman with the body of a 25-year-old and the “eff you” attitude of a recalcitrant teen.  

Her attitude may rile those who think women should only wear Phase Eight past the age of 45, but Hurley is merely one of many 50something – and older – women reframing midlife not as a period to fade away gracefully into the background dressed in something comfy, but as a life stage in which they have never felt – or looked – better. Hurley regularly posts bikini snaps on social media, knowing she’s the best advertisement for her swimwear brand. Other midlife women rocking bikinis on their social feeds include Salma Hayek, 55, Sharon Stone, 64, and model Paulina Porizkova, 57, who has been vocal about the age prejudices women face, most recently urging her 787k followers to stop saying women “still” look beautiful, arguing “a ‘still’ is like a ‘but’ – it ruins a compliment.”  

Of course, photos of Hurley – the older woman may feel – says nothing to them about their life. Many can’t afford the hair, face and body maintenance required by older women in the public eye. Which begs the question: what does sexy look like for the average midlifer?  

Thankfully, not all midlife women are as unrelatable as Hurley when it comes to looking good – and clearly feeling good because of their sartorial choices. Consider Sophie, the Countess of Wessex, 57, who recently wore a white semi-sheer Carolina Herrera skirt while carrying out her royal duties opening a school. Sophie is a fan of semi-sheer garments, often choosing evening dresses with chiffon overlays to provide coverage to her upper arms. Semi-sheer fabrics are a great way to expose your legs or arms without actually exposing them at all. The sexiness is all in the suggestion. 

Sophie, Countess of Wessex, in a semi-sheer Carolina Herrera skirt Credit: Shutterstock

Tailoring is another reliable way to feel your best without baring flesh. Emma Thompson, 63, might be appearing as a sexual adventuress in new film Good Luck To You, Leo Grande, but in real life she’s a clever and understated dresser who looks excellent in trouser suits, most recently in a pale yellow one by Stella McCartney. Other strong arguments for the trouser suit are Annie Lennox, 67, who has been wearing them for years and Trinny Woodall, 58, who favours brightly coloured two-pieces often from the high street. Don’t underestimate the feeling of invincibility a suit can provide – and confidence is always sexy.  

Emma Thompson in a Stella McCartney trouser suit Credit: Michael Loccisano/Getty

But if anyone knows how to do sexy, it’s Philippine Leroy Beaulieu, the scene-stealing star of Call My Agent and Emily In Paris, who at 59 is making more headlines than ever in her decades-long career. When I interviewed her last year, she said that Sylvie’s style in Emily in Paris, created with the help of Patricia Field, was based on that of actresses such as Katharine Hepburn, Joan Crawford and Ava Gardener – all of whom blended feminine and masculine to chic effect. 

In real life, Leroy Beaulieu dresses much like her character – in pencil skirts, loose, tailored trousers and satin shirts, the latter having become a signature. A silk or satin shirt is a great addition to the midlife wardrobe, as every French woman knows. What stops it from looking frumpy is unfastening that one extra button, and tucking it into your waistband instead of wearing it loose. Those self-conscious of their waists could try the “French tuck”, a styling technique whereby a portion of the front is tucked in, while the back and sides are left loose. 

Model Paulina Porizkova has been vocal about the age prejudices women face Credit: Taylor Hill

Fans also wax lyrical about Leroy Beaulieu’s hair, worn long and tousled in a deliberately youthful manner at which many older woman baulk. The hairdresser Sam McKnight, most recently seen on a float at the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee parade alongside his famous friends Kate Moss and Charlotte Tilbury, is adamant that women shouldn’t automatically ditch long hair as they age.  

“Stay away from safe. That old adage that you should cut off all your hair is so old-fashioned and wrong,” he counsels. “I love women with long grey hair. Be free, be adventurous and embrace it. Doing something unexpected with your hair will make you feel younger, and hair is just as much about how it makes you feel as how it makes you look. What will age you are the sort of styles that people had 30 years ago. Being in your 60s and 70s doesn’t mean getting a short perm any more. That type of hairstyle has almost disappeared.”  

Trinny Woodall demonstrating the power of a suit Credit: Anna Martensson

No amount of hair dye, silk shirts or sexy tailoring will change the age discrimination that older women suffer. Our worth being determined by what we wear and how we look is an issue that understandably goads many into feeling pressured to keep up appearances for others and not themselves. The ever-stylish Naomi Watts recently recalled how she was told she’d become irrelevant if she got too old and was no longer ‘f-------’. “This is an ageist industry,” the 53-year-old actress said. Those sniffy about Hurley’s thirsty bikini snaps perhaps haven’t felt the deathly embrace of society’s invisibility cloak, a discriminatory garment that only seeks out older women.  

Of course, women should only ever wear what they feel happy and confident in, whether that’s a silk shirt or a slanket. Sexiness means something different to us all and what you feel your best in can differ wildly from day to day. Who knows, even Liz Hurley might have put the safety pin dress away and currently be sporting jeans or leggings. Then again, don’t bet on it. 

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