It Happened to Me: Inappropriate Theatre Touching

in #misogyny8 years ago


I work in a prominent Ontario theatre. With the exception of a few untoward 'darling's and 'sweetheart's this theatre season, I have not experienced anything more than slightly unwelcome when it comes to sexually-derived comments from men. I have always felt confident that if a man were to say something terribly inappropriate, I could tell him off quite sternly. But what happens when the unwanted attention comes from an elderly man?

In the tourist industry, September tourists are known as the white-haired wave. School is back in session, and elderly travellers are out in full force.

On my night off this month, I attended a theatre production. At intermission, the elderly couple next to me decided to stay in their seats, so I got up and shuffled in front of them. In order to ‘help me along’, the gentleman placed his hand on my waist while I walked by. I didn’t know what to do… so I did nothing. Not my proudest moment. When I mentioned what happened to my theatre companion, she answered with ‘ew,’ but nothing more was said. At the theatre bar, we picked up some intermission drinks. It was very crowded, so I attempted to back slowly away from the bar to find somewhere to turn around. I backed into an old man behind me, and he proceeded to grab my waist, then moved one hand down to my hip for a light squeeze. This was apparently an attempt to ensure I did not bump him. I felt slightly ill, but again did nothing.

The following day, it was a similar crowd. I believe the House Manager said that the average age of the audience that day was 85 – not a student in sight. As I was working behind the bar, I saw the House Manager helping an elderly woman into her wheelchair. There was an old man sitting on the bench next to them, and as the House Manager was bent over the wheelchair, the man smacked her hard in the butt with his hand. She stood up shocked. Later, she told me that he had said: “I like it when you bend over in front of me, what do I need to do to get you to do it again?” His wife apologized, calling him a dirty old man, and the House Manager dismissed them, and left. He called after her “I’m not done with you yet.”

Why are we so quick to dismiss this behaviour when it comes from the elderly? I know my family is guilty of this too; my grandmother’s husband will often say sexist or racist things that make us all cringe, ‘but he’s 95’ so we don’t say anything.
What do we do? Do we wait for these old asses to die because, as the saying goes, you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? If a man doesn’t respect women by that age, can you change his mind? What worries me is, what are the younger generations learning from watching this behaviour go unchecked? I guess the real question is: The next time an old man squeezes my hip, should I punch him?

Originally written for TheFeminismProject.com

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So sorry to hear . Unfortunately we assume people are always are going to behave in the right way. To me its called breeding and how you were brought up yourself. Age is no excuse for these people as if you are a toucher at 80 they have probably been that way all their life.

Thanks for the comment! I agree for sure: "can't teach an old dog new tricks" as it were. One of society's uglier parts, unfortunately!

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