Current:Home > StocksAt 61, Meg Ryan is the lead in a new rom-com. That shouldn’t be such a rare thing. -TrueNorth Capital Hub
At 61, Meg Ryan is the lead in a new rom-com. That shouldn’t be such a rare thing.
View
Date:2025-04-15 02:43:42
It’s hard to overstate how much we missed Meg Ryan.
The effervescent actress led some of the most indelible romantic comedies of the 1980s and ‘90s, from Nora Ephron-penned classics “When Harry Met Sally,” “You’ve Got Mail” and “Sleepless in Seattle” to quirkier outings like “Joe Versus the Volcano.”
Now, at 61, she's back in her beloved genre with "What Happens Later," co-starring the similarly treasured David Duchovny, 63. It's the rare rom-com headlined by two sexagenarians, centering on a former couple as they hash out their differences while stranded at an airport.
When the trailer for “What Happens Later” (in theaters Oct. 13) premiered Wednesday, movie fans on X (formerly Twitter) effusively celebrated her return. “Almost cried seeing Meg Ryan,” said one user. “A new Meg Ryan rom-com will fix everything,” proclaimed another.
With her shaggy blond tresses and mischievous grin, Ryan has long been one of our most compelling actors. In "You've Got Mail," she delivers one of the finest rom-com performances ever, bringing gumption and vulnerability to Kathleen, an independent bookseller who's hopelessly hanging onto her late mother's storefront. "Whatever else anything is, it ought to begin by being personal," Kathleen says at one point, which aptly describes Ryan's inquisitive and open-hearted approach to acting.
The charming trailer for "What Happens Later," Ryan's second movie as a director, reminds us just how lucky we are to have her back after an eight-year acting hiatus. It's also yet another a reminder that Hollywood needs to invest in more movies starring women over 40.
In quotes provided to Entertainment Weekly before the actors' strike, Ryan said the film "evolves the rom-com genre just a little bit. It's also about old people, and it's still romantic and sexy."
Watch the trailer:Meg Ryan returns to rom-coms with 'What Happens Later' alongside David Duchovny
According to an analysis released in March by the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University, 36% of films released last year included a speaking female character in her 30s. But that number sharply decreased as women got into their 40s (16%), 50s (8%) and 60s (7%).
By comparison, the numbers were nearly double for male characters in their 40s (29%) and 50s (15%), while 9% of films featured men over 60.
From a box-office standpoint, audiences clearly want to see movies with women over 40. Ryan's 1990s rom-com contemporaries Julia Roberts (“Ticket to Paradise”) and Sandra Bullock (“The Lost City”) both recently cleared $150 million globally with their respective films. “80 for Brady,” with an A-list female cast whose ages ranged from 76 to 91, made a respectable $40 million worldwide earlier this year.
And on streaming, Reese Witherspoon's "Your Place or Mine" and Jennifer Lopez's "Shotgun Wedding" were major hits when they debuted on Netflix and Amazon, respectively, at the start of 2023. Clearly, there's an appetite for all kinds of women's stories, as long as Hollywood is willing to tell them.
Narratives about aging – and how people and relationships grow along with it – are important to see on the big and small screen.
They "can help shape our perceptions of what it might look like to age in the current world as it is," Katherine Pieper, program director at the University of Southern California's Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, told USA TODAY earlier this year. "The more that we can see authentic portrayals of what it means to grow older in society … that might be very important for how people think about their own life trajectory."
So instead of headlines about Ryan's appearance, as we saw earlier this summer, let's get back to what really matters: the work itself.
"There are more important conversations than how women look and how they are aging," Ryan told Net-A-Porter magazine in 2015. "I love my age. I love my life right now. I love what I know about. I love the person I've become, the one I've evolved into."
To paraphrase another Ephron favorite: We'll have what she's having.
Contributing: Erin Jensen
veryGood! (11989)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- AT&T says hackers accessed records of calls and texts for nearly all its cellular customers
- Progressives look to Supreme Court to motivate voters in 2024 race
- Beastie Boys sue Chili's parent company for copyright infringement
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- The race is on to save a 150-year-old NY lighthouse from crumbling into the Hudson River
- Lakers vs. Rockets live updates: Watch Bronny James in summer league game today
- Judge throws out Rudy Giuliani’s bankruptcy case, says he flouted process with lack of transparency
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Deeply Democratic Milwaukee wrestles with hosting Trump, Republican National Convention
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- One woman escaped a ‘dungeon’ beneath a Missouri home, another was killed. Here’s a look at the case
- Police chief resigns after theft of his vehicle, shootout in Maine town
- Evictions surge in Phoenix as rent increases prompt housing crisis
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Appeals court makes it harder to disqualify absentee ballots in battleground Wisconsin
- Pastors see a wariness among Black men to talk abortion politics as Biden works to shore up base
- US Forest Service pilot hikes to safety after helicopter crash near central Idaho wildfire
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Tour helicopter crash off Hawaiian island leaves 1 dead and 2 missing
Angry birds have been swarming drones looking for sharks and struggling swimmers off NYC beaches
Antonio Banderas and Stepdaughter Dakota Johnson's Reunion Photo Is Fifty Shades of Adorable
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Federal judge refuses to block Biden administration rule on gun sales in Kansas, 19 other states
Wisconsin Republicans to open new Hispanic outreach center
Man who plotted to murder TV host Holly Willoughby sentenced to life: Reports