My first girl crush was a big one I’ve never got over. It was Endora from TV’s Bewitched, Samantha’s naughty mother. I wanted her to adopt me. I still do.
I LOVED everything about Endora. It was about her knuckle-size jewels and that statement helmet hair. Her eyebrows were an art form and I even loved the way she spoke, every word a purred pearl.
I love the way she swished when she strutted, a wafting silk rainbow in her wake. I imagined her wildly exotic perfume.
But most of all I loved what Endora made me feel. Her cool, centred confidence. She oozed wisdom. Every line on her face told a wicked story I wanted to hear. She showed me a fantasy and mystery of a lived life. I didn’t want Darren and the suburbs. I wanted wherever she was going.
In fact, I have always loved a great dame. Women, not girls. Not so much blank canvases but abstract masterpieces painted by experience. Feisty femmes who sizzle with inner strength, who’ve been there, done that, fallen down, got up again. Women with insight, who haven’t grown older, just wiser.
Growing up in awe of old Hollywood, it was all about attitude in my mind. Those actresses were not so much ageless as timeless. I never thought of how old Rosalind Russell, Mae West, Marlene Dietrich, Katharine Hepburn and Bette David were, only that were women not girls, that they had an inner power just as Helen Mirren, Patti Smith, Dame Judi Dench, Bette Midler, Aretha Frankin, Chrissie Hynde and countless others posses today.