She turned, walked out of the frame, and sat down in her director's chair. Leo finally called "cut," then ran over, stammering. "That was—that wasn't—but we can use it. We can definitely use it."
"I know what the industry thinks," she interrupted. "They think I'm a character actor now. A 'wonderful supporting role.' The eccentric aunt. The wise judge. The corpse in the first five minutes." She looked out her trailer window at the young crew packing up lights. "Tell them I'm developing a project. A story about women over fifty. No murders. No ghosts. Just the real horror: being told you're invisible while you're still breathing."
On the first day of shooting, Celeste gathered the cast—all women over fifty-five, none of them "bankable" by the usual metrics.
Six months later, Celeste stood on a different set. She was directing The Looking Glass , a quiet, fierce drama about three former rivals—actresses in their sixties and seventies—who reunite to bury a friend and end up burying their own grievances instead. She had cast herself in a small role. The lead went to a seventy-one-year-old actress who'd been told she was "too old for love scenes."