Wear a red hat with a purple dress? Wear
white shoes after Labor Day? Laugh loudly in public? Not allowed, according the
rules many women “of a certain age” have lived by in the past. But no longer do
those rules – or any others, for that matter – shackle the behavior of a growing
number of loosely affiliated 50-something (and older, much older) women across
North America.
The members of the Red Hat Society have
found growing older and breaking those silly rules to be so much fun, in fact,
that they have spontaneously organized themselves into something of a revolution
about the way society views older women.
Actually, the Red Hat Society is often
referred to fondly as a “disorganization”. However, with over 3,000 chapters
across North America, it has been forced to impart a degree of order to its
operations, according to founder Sue Ellen Cooper of Fullerton, California.
A bit of organization maybe, but no rules.
Just a dress code: red hats and purple dresses. After a lifetime of following
the rules and pleasing others, these women figure they’ve earned the right to
dress gaudily if they want to. So as a way of laughing at mid-life and beyond,
these women wear the obligatory old-age purple and lace, but spoof it up by
adding an outrageous hat that doesn’t match.
The group started rather inadvertently.
While visiting a friend several years ago, Cooper impulsively bought a bright
red fedora at a thrift shop. A year or two later she read a popular poem
entitled “Warning” by Jenny Joseph, which begins “When I am an old woman I shall
wear purple with a red hat which doesn’t go...”. She decided that her birthday
gift to a friend would be a vintage red hat and a copy of the poem. Then she
gave the same gift to another friend, then another, then another....
One day, it occurred to the women that
they were becoming a sort of Red Hat Society and perhaps should go out to tea
wearing their hats and purple dresses. They gave themselves titles like “Exalted
Queen Mother”, “Princess Daughter” and “Sergeant in Gloves”.
According to the official story line, they
had so much fun that they bought more hats and invited more women. Since tea
tables are rather small and the women had friends in other places besides
California, they have had to encourage other women to start their own chapters.
When the women were featured in Romantic
Homes Magazine in July of 2000, they began to get inquiries from other
interested women across North America who wanted to start their own chapters.
They then decided to utilize the web as a means of communication.
Now, flamboyant scarlet hats, purple
frocks, red boas, lace gloves and other bits of humorous clothing are worn by
fun-loving women all across the continent and, increasingly, around the world.
They meet for tea and other events, and the only rule is that they should be
appropriately dressed and focused on having some “sisterly fun”.
Actually, these aren’t really “rules” but
“suggestions”. Oh, and you should be over 50. (You can join if you’re younger,
but it is suggested that you wear a pink hat and lavender outfit until you have
the birthday.) As the Raspberry Tarts chapter in Kitchener, Ontario claims, “You
can tell you’re over 50 when... you stop taking yourself seriously!”.
In April of 2002 in Chicago, the
Red Hat Society held its first convention. Imagine an entire hotel filled with
women “of a certain age” wearing red hats and purple outfits (they even had a
pajama party)! Planning is already underway for next year’s shindig, to be held
in Nashville in May, 2003. There’s even a storefront in Fullerton, California
that sells Red Hat paraphernalia like fluffy boas, crowns and tiaras, rhinestone
sunglasses, hat pins, broaches and mugs with the trademarked Red Hat Society
logo...and lots of red hats.
So if you’re in a tea room somewhere and there’s a group of high spirited women
wearing red hats and purple dresses, you’ll know they’re merely taking advantage
of one of the most effective and inexpensive antidotes for aging – acceptance
laced with humor.
Learn More
Red Hat Society
221 N. Harbor Blvd., suite P
Fullerton CA 92832 USA
Phone: (714) 738-0001
Web: www.redhatsociety.com
Warning: When I Am an Old Woman I Shall Wear Purple
by Jenny Joseph,
Pythia Ashton-Jewell (Souvenir Press, 2001)
When I Am an Old Woman I Shall Wear Purple
by Sandra Haldeman Martz (Editor), Foreword by Jenny Joseph (Papier-Mache Press,
1991)
The Red Hat Society (R)'s Laugh Lines: Stories of Inspiration and Hattitude
by Sue Ellen Cooper (Grand Central
Publishing, 2005)
Wendy Priesnitz is the Editor of
Natural Life Magazine and a journalist with 30 years of experience.
She has also authored nine
books.
Read her
blog.