Tag Archive for 'Gloria Steinem'

Read my new piece for the WMC: A Transformative Oscar Moment?

Here’s the beginning:

In less than one week, March 7 to be exact, the Hollywood awards season will be over, and chances are very good that for the first time a woman—Kathryn Bigelow—will have won the best director Oscar for The Hurt Locker.  Three other women (Lina Wertmuller, Jane Campion and Sophia Coppola) have been nominated in the 82 years that the Academy has held its awards, but with due respect to them and their films, none of them had a shot.

This year is different.  Based on earlier awards by critics and more recently by the Directors Guild (a first for a woman director) and the British academy (BAFTA)—as well as conversations with several Oscar watchers—the consensus is that Bigelow is at the front of the pack to win the award.  Last week, Time magazine got into the act titling its story “The Front Runner.” Forgive me for not sounding the trumpets in advance but we all have seen female front runners fade. While there are many reasons to believe that Bigelow will win, there is something in the back of my head that screams caution remembering the Gloria Steinem piece from the 2008 election season “Women are Never Front-Runners.”

Read full piece here

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Tags: Academy Awards, Anne Thompson, Gloria Steinem, Jane Campion, Kathryn Bigelow, Lina Wertmuller, Sophia Coppola

When Jane Met Gloria

jane and gloriaWhen I started Women & Hollywood one of the things I dreamed about was doing events with women to raise awareness of issues effecting women in film and other areas of pop culture, and to help build a community to make change in areas that need some serious work.

Never in my wildest imaginations did I think that I would ever get to plan and host an event like the one we had this week for Jane Campion at Gloria Steinem’s home.  (Disclosure: Apparition Films, the distributor of Bright Star paid for the event including my time.)

This was an event where I was able to bring together women who worked in different areas of pop culture including novelists, magazine writers, poets, tv professionals, bloggers, women’s organization leaders, playwrights and directors to meet Jane Campion and celebrate her film Bright Star.  Here’s just a sampling of some of the people who were in the room: Ines Alberdi from UNIFEM; Ann Curry from the Today Show; writer Patricia Bosworth; director Nancy Savoca; feminist media activist Carol Jenkins; playwright and director Emily Mann; writer Erica Jong, writer Susanna Moore; Julie Parker Benello and Wendy Ettinger from Chicken & Egg Picutres; Planned Parenthood leader Cecile Richards and many others.

I know I’m bragging, but it was a magical evening where the group was able to hear from Jane and her experiences and also to talk about figuring out ways to improve the situation for women directors.

I really hope it is the start of something special and that many more events will follow.

Since I was really busy I didn’t take such great notes but the thing that was so wonderful was that Jane was unafraid to talk about the abysmal situation for women directors.  As a successful female director, she knows how much things suck for women in the business.  Many women are afraid to speak out.  That needs to change.

Here are some of the nuggets Jane shared:

She is looking forward to the day when we stop saying women filmmaker and that women are introduced as artists.

That women directors in the US are more timid than their counterparts abroad.

Poetry is the only thing that does not disappoint on this planet.

Filmmaking seems to have a glass ceiling that is untransparent.

That is makes her furious that men aren’t more interested in what women think.

Thanks to everyone who took the time out to attend the event.  If you are interested, my remarks from the evening are after the break.  More photos will be posted on the Women & Hollywood Facebook page.

Continue reading ‘When Jane Met Gloria’

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Tags: Bright Star, Gloria Steinem, Jane Campion

The Silence is Deafening

It seems that I am now officially obsessed with the Roman Polanski insanity.  As I’ve gone further down this rabbit hole I find my compatriots on the internet to be with me in force but others who I expected to hear from are just silent.

The silence is deafening.  Where are my feminist leaders on this issue?  Leaders are supposed to lead.  They are supposed to be out in front on issues, especially one as big as this.   I guess this could be another funeral marker for mainstream organizational feminism which for some reasons has been mostly silent. The only person I could find yesterday was Katie Buckland (and I heard Susan Estrich on NPR) who runs the CA Women’s Law Center who said this to the LA Times.

Most troubling to me is that people just don’t understand the impact a crime like this has on a 13-year-old girl, and the fact that he has made some fabulous films is utterly irrelevant…It sends a message that the rich and powerful can get away with crimes that no one else can get away with.

Other feminists and organizations are starting to get on the band wagon, but in my humble opinion they are really late.

The Women’s Media Center folks released a statement: “The rape of a child is at the heart of the case. That is not disputed, and should not be represented as subjective.”

Robin Morgan said this: “Simple. Child abuse is child abuse. Rape is rape. One justice for all. And Woody Allen defending Polanski would be hilarious if it weren’t so sick.”

Gloria Steinem is sadly out of the country and I really believe she would be kicking ass on this, but hers is not the only voice we need.

NOW is working on a statement and their president is talking to the media.  Whoopee.

But no one in Hollywood, — especially the women — is talking, so here am I little niche blogger going on the record big time about this.  You know what’s scary to me?  That conservatives are agreeing with me.  Do you know how much it pains me to say that?  Why the fuck aren’t the progressive people standing up to this, and more importantly why the fuck are progressive people standing behind him?

The growing petition list makes me want to wretch.  I’m thinking the issue touches close to home for many a director who has probably employed the “casting couch” and may have committed an action similar to Polanski’s sometime in his career.  Plus, I’m sure there is pressure being applied to people to get on board and support the artist.  (wink, wink)  The good news to me is that I can’t find a single American actress or director (I am not counting Debra Winger’s rant at the Zurich Film Festival) on the list.  But there are European actresses and American male directors on the list.

I know that Hollywood is a scary place to speak out about things, especially about women.  This fear has allowed a culture of misogyny to take root and to spread its tentacles all over.  The thing about the Polanski case and why it is resonating across the country and the world is that lots of people don’t like the double standard that Hollywood is showing here.  Hollywood is liberal when it feels like it like with the environment, but not when it comes to women.  It’s safe to drive a hybrid but not safe to hire a female director.

In my gut, I believe that the women of Hollywood are appalled by what is happening.  The fact that they are silent is a reminder of how little clout they have.  I know there are feminists in the business and I believe deep down that if they would do something they could.  But that is the exact reason why they should speak out because one day someone they know, or someone’s daughter will be in a situation that is harmful and no one is there for her.

We can use this moment for something bigger than just throwing in jail a 76 year old man who was a coward all those years ago.  We can actually start a conversation about how women are treated in Hollywood and in the world. Girls are trafficked, and are raped, and are denied schooling all because they have two x chromosomes.

Here’s the deal.  The world is watching Hollywood and what they are seeing is not pretty.  Maybe when this becomes about money and not art then someone will stand up and say something.

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Tags: Debra Winger, Gloria Steinem, Robin Morgan, Roman Polanski

Fatal Promises: A Look at Human Trafficking

It is absolutely unacceptable that we have a slave trade in the 21st century.  It is beyond belief – Emma Thompson

I saw this Fatal Promises on Saturday and I have not stopped thinking about the topic.  It’s not because Emma Thompson was there and was so passionate about the issue, it’s because I felt — and still feel — really ignorant on the topic.

emmaTo me it’s unfathomable to believe and understand how people can feel that’s it’s ok to sell other people.  They sell people and make money at it.  All day, every day.  This is a huge business.  Bigger than arms and drugs, yet we all want to get rid of drugs and keep trying unsuccessfully to deal with the arms topic, but the selling of people — mostly women and girls — just passes us by as we go about our every day lives.

The film tells the story of several people — both men and women — who have escaped from slavery.  Yes, they are slaves.  It’s not what we think of as slavery, but they are held against their will, lots of time transported to foreign country, lots of time sexually abused, not fed and made to do work that they are not paid for.  That’s slavery.

Emma Thompson became moved by the issue because she met a woman, Elena, who worked in a massage parlor on Emma’s street in London.  It was a place she and her family passed every day and joked about and behind the glass window was a young woman who was a slave.

Fatal Promises webLots of people who are trafficked are women and girls who are forced into sex work.  Girls are kidnapped or sold and young women are lured lots of times by other women into situations they can’t escape from. Fundamentally as Emma Thompson said: “I suppose that it has to do with the fact that in the world there is not enough safety for women.  Women are not safe in many places and that’s a huge and complex issue but in essence the undervaluing of the female is at the root of all of this.”

As an individual, the whole issue seems so overwhelming because there is so much that is unknown.  It’s an underground issue that is about power, sex and money   But you can do something.  First, think about the people around you. Lots of times people who have been trafficked are hidden in plain sight.  If something looks fishy call the cops.  Problem is that lots of times the women who have been trafficked are treated like criminals because there are no good laws to deal with persons who are in another country against their will without proper papers.

Another thing to do is to learn about the issue.  That’s on my list.  If you are in NY go and see this film.  It opens tomorrow at the Cinema Village.

In November, Emma Thompson who is the chair of the Helen Bamber Foundation an organization that works with survivors of human rights abuses, will bring to NY Journey an installation that “bring the reality of the sex trafficking industry to the forefront of social consciousness and empower people to take action. Shackles bind perpetrators to victims, and victims to the punters who exploit them.”

Here are some tidbits (courtesy of Charlotte Cooper and her Flip Cam) from Emma and director Kat Rohrer talking about the issue after the screening on Saturday.

You can check out the trailer for the film on the Fatal Promises site

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Tags: Emma Thompson, Gloria Steinem