Geena Davis receives honorary Oscar for work against gender bias
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
Los Angeles
ACTRESS Geena Davis urged Hollywood filmmakers to take new steps to address an ongoing gender imbalance in media as she accepted an honorary Oscar on Sunday for her work to promote more women on screen.
While equality for women lags throughout US society, it is even worse in film and television, said Ms Davis, the Thelma and Louise star who founded a nonprofit research group called the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media in 2004.
"However abysmal the numbers are in real life, it's far worse in fiction - where you make it up!" said Ms Davis as she accepted the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award. "We make it worse" .
The actress spoke to an audience of hundreds of Hollywood power players at the Governors Awards, an annual black-tie event hosted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, the group that hands out the Oscars.
Ms Davis, who won a supporting actress Oscar in 1989 for The Accidental Tourist, said gender inequality on screen "can be fixed absolutely overnight".
Navigate Asia in
a new global order
Get the insights delivered to your inbox.
She urged everyone in the audience to take the scripts they were currently working on and "cross out a bunch of first names, of ensemble characters and supporting characters, and make them female".
"With one stroke, you have created some non-stereotyped characters that might turn out to be even more interesting now that they have a gender swap," she said.
"Let's make this change happen," she added.
Other honorees were Wes Studi, who was recognised for his commitment to authentic portrayals of Native Americans in films from Dances with Wolves to The Last of the Mohicans, and Blue Velvet filmmaker David Lynch.
Italian writer-director Lina Wertmuller also received a lifetime achievement award from the film academy. Ms Wertmuller was the first of just five women ever to be nominated for best director. That was in 1977 for her film Seven Beauties. Like Ms Davis, Ms Wertmuller called out Hollywood for tending to favour men, according to actress Isabella Rossellini, who translated Ms Wermuller's acceptance speech from Italian to English.
She would like to change the name Oscar to Anna," Ms Rossellini said. REUTERS
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Shelving S$5 billion office redevelopment plan proved ‘wise’ as geopolitical risks mount: OCBC chairman
Eurokars Group introduces rental car franchises Enterprise Rent-A-Car, National Car Rental, and Alamo to Singapore
20 photos that show how dramatically Singapore has changed in two decades
Singapore’s key exports up 15.3% in March from electronics surge, exceeding forecasts