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Liz Smith | 08/14/2008 10:00 am

Madonna's Half-Century (Others Care, Even if You Don't)

Liz Smith

On August 16th, Madonna turns 50. She is still young — 50 is the new 25! — but perhaps because she has been a megastar since she was 25, it seems as if she is 80. Remember the famous H. Rider Haggard book (and later an Ursula Andress movie) She? That’s how we think of Madonna — thousands of years old, renewing herself by walking through the magic fire. I think human sacrifice was involved, too.  (Well, if you believe her brother Christopher …)

Not since Marlene Dietrich became the "World’s Most Glamorous Grandmother" have I seen such fret and fuss about a star’s age. (Miss Dietrich, who never saw a publicity angle she didn’t love, was initially amused by the glam granny references. Later, as the business of putting "Marlene Dietrich" together became more labor intensive, she was less cheery about it.)

Of course, with every round-numbered birthday that Madonna has passed — 30, 40 – the press has asked, "Is Madonna the Material Girl Now Immaterial? Is She Still Relevant?" The answer is f— yeah, she’s still relevant. When you don’t ask, she’ll be gone. There has always been an unseemly media haste to put an end to maturing female careers, especially when that career is based, at least in part, on good looks or sex appeal.

Truth to tell, Madonna’s record sales are not quite what they once were in the United States, but in Europe she sells three times as many CDs. Ticket sales for her coming U.S. and European concert tour remain stratospheric. (This ongoing aspect of her career is very much like that of the withered Rolling Stones and nobody is bothering to diss their crow’s-feet!)

Madonna is too thin, too worked-out and her hair is way too long. But these are the choices she makes. It doesn’t photograph well. In person — and I have seen her in person without makeup recently — she looks softer, younger and prettier. Not so unappealingly muscular.

People ask me, as Madonna’s birthday approaches, if I have advice for her? Puh-LEEZE. I wish she had some advice for ME. I’d like 600 million dollars.

As a friend, I’d only suggest she relax. As a friend, she’d probably reply, "I will when you will, Liz!" (Several years ago, my newspaper, the New York Post obliged me to ask Madonna if she was ever going to retire? She laughed and said, "Are you?" End of subject.)

Madonna, you keep on keeping on as long as you want. Happy birthday, honey!

Oh, and here are a few other stars who reach the half-century mark this year — Michael Jackson, Prince, Angela Bassett, Kevin Bacon, Ellen DeGeneres, Sharon Stone, Candace Bushnell and Tim Burton.

But as far as the press is concerned, it’s All About Madonna.

Click here to see photos from wowOwow Photo Gallery Salutes Madonna’s 50th Birthday.

Click here on this text to read my nationally syndicated daily column.

Read more about: Birthday, Madonna

38 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

DeBúrca obj
Liz I hope it isn’t hurting your feelings that so many people say they don’t care. However, I think the only people who really care about celebrities’ personal lives are young people, people who actually know them, and people who live in Southern California.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2008 9:10 am
James the Game
Agreed DeB. I like Liz, and I don’t mind a little celebrity gossip or whatever. It has its place. She’s quite enjoyable. But I think WoWoW.com could serve and empower women (and society) much more if it focused more on informative columns and articles. I’d love to hear what Marlo Thomas thinks about some of the current societal issues/news. Couldn’t Lesley Stahl provide insight for us commoners about some of the doings behind the scenes in Washington, D.C. Personally, I would love to research and write articles for WoW on things that really affect women’s everyday lives, anything from health to finance to whatever. The entertainment stuff that Liz provides is excellent, and appreciated. Please don’t do away with the fluff stuff. But the readership really seems - based on the brunt of the reactions - to be clamoring for more news they can use. And that’s where the website should be positioning itself a tad more, in my humble opinion.
By James the Game on 08/14/2008 2:58 pm
Susan B
DeBurca, I have lived and traveled all over America, and my impression is that the star struck are found just about everywhere in this country, but especially in places that celebrities tend to “fly over.” That was an unnecessary and sweeping generalization you made about the people who live in SoCal. And about young people, for that matter.
By Susan B on 08/14/2008 4:12 pm
DeBúrca obj
It was a bit of a joke Susan. However, in my own experience with my own family in Palm Springs and LA and my daughter’s college roomate from San Diego and her parents… Not sure if you actually think celebrities “fly over” Chicago, but, I have never heard as much interest in celebrities personal lives from anyone here in Chicago as I have from all these southern CA people I know, in fact, they even laugh about their fascination with these people. They also have a habit, every one of them of referring to celebrities on a first name basis, to the point that I’ve had to ask them if they actually knew these people personally. And young people are much more into celebrity and pop culture, that is the main demographic of the whole celebrity industry. Just take a look at tv shows and movies and who the majority of them are targeted toward.
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2008 5:34 pm
J B
Who is “fretting and fussing” about this? This website is giving her a lot more play than others. Really, I don’t mean to be rude, but isn’t there SOME OTHER subject more interesting???
By J B on 08/14/2008 9:33 am
Lorraine Bates
Ah, Prince. I still go weak in the knees…. Liz, you keep on keepin’ on. Who cares what the who-cares sayers say!
By Lorraine Bates on 08/14/2008 10:04 am
Linda LL
Yeah, you go Liz! and wouldn’t ya know it i am seeing that strange phenomenon of soo many “who cares”…don’t they read the headline? I say, if you don’t care…..don’t click!
By Linda LL on 08/14/2008 6:03 pm
babs dennis
Hi Liz: I don’t think as many people care about that woman’s birthday. It’s stunning to me that WOW is devoting this much coverage to her, when there are so many more interesting things going on in the world. Bad call. Boring. Please, oh please, let’s move on fast to something else. Anything else. B
By babs dennis on 08/14/2008 10:06 am
Bonnie Oliver
Liz, I like your headline. It says it all for the naysayers here.
By Bonnie Oliver on 08/14/2008 10:20 am
Jeanette Foresta
Yup, fifty is the new 16. LOL I admire the material girl! I wish I could have known her when we were all still club hopping in manhattan.
By Jeanette Foresta on 08/14/2008 10:51 am
kermie b
Madonna’s energy and search for inner peace is admirable and glowingly representative of the “new Fifty.” Boring, she isn’t.
By kermie b on 08/14/2008 3:06 pm
Richard Bassett
At 64, Elizabeth Taylor looked 30. Then her hips gave up but she slid rather abruptly into old age and she is still going strong. She never skipped a beat. I believe that the quality of one’s own life shines through via growing older, when all of the external defenses are down. You can usually tell if they had ‘fun’ or not. I hope Madonna has had fun and her severe looks are only photographically enhanced.
By Richard Bassett on 08/14/2008 3:57 pm
DeBúrca obj
Am I wrong about this, and I very likely may be wrong because I really don’t know how these websites work. But don’t the owners of this site make their money per hit? So, does it really matter if people come in to say they don’t care about certain stories and to debate that fact with others? It looks to me as though Liz’s stories get a lot of hits and if the posts were limited to only people who really cared about that celebrity or that recent rumor… there would be less hits and less money made?
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2008 5:40 pm
James the Game
The ability to procure expensive advertising sponsors for a website largely depends on how much web traffic is generated. Search-engine optimization is one way to drive more customers to a site. In other words, when people who use search engines online such as Google, Yahoo, etc., does your particular website show up high on the listings under various categories. For example, when I did a Google.com search under “Women’s Issues” and “Women’s Blog”, the WowOwow.com website was nowhere to be found on the initial search pages - not good. It did come up on Google prominently under “Women on the Web”, also on the bottom of page 1 underly Lesley Stahl, but not for several of the other celebrities/columnists who pen for WoW. This site does have going for it some quality name recognition, although it’s been quite a disappointment for many how infrequently some of the stars bother to write at all, maybe once a month. And, then, you get the feeling they might not spend any time at all looking at the website themselves, but merely Email in a tome once every 30 days or do a group phone-call convo for a monthly stipend. Or, if they do write, it’s under an alias, for some strange reason, as if they’re afraid to attach their names publicly to their opinions. That may not be fair or correct, but that’s one possible perception.
By James the Game on 08/14/2008 9:31 pm
DeBúrca obj
So, would the amount of hits this site gets, people posting comments, etc. show up as web traffic?
By DeBúrca obj on 08/14/2008 11:42 pm