Women
find little change off camera in Hollywood: study
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[January 13, 2015]
By Eric Kelsey
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The
number of women working behind the camera in Hollywood's
top-grossing films has changed little over the past
decade despite a slight uptick last year, an annual
study released on Tuesday has found.
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The "Celluloid Ceiling" study from San Diego State
University's Center for the Study of Women in Television and
Film said 7 percent of the top 250 films at the U.S. box office
in 2014 were directed by a woman, a 1 percentage point increase
from 2013.
"It's not really moving much one way or the other," said study
author Martha Lauzen, who added that the number of films
directed by women in 2014 has declined to 7 percent from 9
percent since the study began 1998.
Seventeen percent of key off-screen figures - which includes
directors, writers, producers, executive producers, editors and
cinematographers - were women last year, the study found, also a
1 percentage point rise from 2013 but unchanged from 1998.
"This is clearly an industry-wide problem that requires and
industry-wide solution," Lauzen said. "As an industry, film has
not taken on this issue of women's chronic underemployment."
The study comes as Hollywood's awards season revs into high gear
following Sunday's Golden Globe Awards and the upcoming Academy
Awards nominations on Thursday.
Ava DuVernay's historical drama "Selma" is the only early Oscar
favorite this year to be directed by a woman, while Angelina
Jolie's World War Two biopic "Unbroken" is the only film by a
woman to crack the top 100 at the U.S. box office in 2014.
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Only one woman, Kathryn Bigelow in 2010 for "The Hurt Locker," has
won the best director Oscar in 86 years of Hollywood's top honors.
The study considered 2,822 behind-the-scenes workers and found women
were most highly represented as producers at 23 percent and
executive producers at 19 percent.
Women comprised 18 percent of editors, 11 percent of writers while
cinematographers were the lowest represented job at 5 percent.
Lauzen said one issue facing women is a greater emphasis in
Hollywood on ethnic diversity as opposed to gender diversity.
"The sex of the director is incredibly important because the
research shows that the sex of the director is related to the
percentage of female characters that we seen on screen," Lauzen
said.
"This is a very complex industry and a very complex problem," Lauzen
added. "There isn't a magic bullet here.
(Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy and Lisa Shumaker)
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