Knightley, 34, plays a member of the Women's
Liberation Movement, which storms the stage of the London
theater where the beauty pageant was being held. That year Miss
Grenada won, the first time a black competitor had taken the
crown.
The themes of feminism and racism appealed to the actress, she
said, as they had ongoing resonance in a world where equality
still felt a long way off.
"What I loved about this film was that conversation because it
felt so very relevant to what we're still talking about today,"
Knightley told Reuters in an interview.
Back in 1970, Miss World was the most-watched TV show on the
planet with more than 100 million viewers, meaning the protest
created quite a stir. Misbehaviour opens in British cinemas on
March 13, starring Greg Kinnear as pageant host Bob Hope, the
comedian, and Gugu Mbatha-Raw as Miss Grenada.
Knightley is even more conscious of women's rights and related
issues like the #MeToo movement which calls out sexual
misconduct across the entertainment, politics and business
industries, because she is raising two young daughters.
"With social media...I do completely worry about that with my
kids and I worry about the kind of images that they're going to
be bombarded by," she said.
But Knightly believes progress has been made and the film pays
tribute to the women who helped achieve that.
"I think you have to honor and mark the women that created that
great progress before us," she said.
(Reporting by Hanna Rantala, writing by Sarah Young, editing by
Ed Osmond)
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