Edmonton Journal

‘This is not feminism’

Lawrence tells those who question appropriat­eness of dress to ‘get a grip’

- SONIA RAO

Jennifer Lawrence will wear what she wants to, gosh darn it.

“Get a grip, people,” she wrote Wednesday on Facebook. “Everything you see me wear is my choice. And if I want to be cold THATS MY CHOICE TOO!”

Lawrence’s post refers to a controvers­y surroundin­g an outfit she wore Tuesday to a photo call for her film Red Sparrow. News outlets and social media users ruminated on whether her choice, a Versace dress with a plunging neckline and thigh-high slit, was appropriat­e for brisk London weather.

“Please give Jennifer Lawrence a dang coat,” Jezebel pleaded. Twitter users replied to the Versace account’s photo of her in the velvet gown with comments such as, “I’ve seen your beautiful suits and coats. Why don’t you respect Ms. Lawrence enough to dress her appropriat­ely for the weather?”

An editor at the British magazine New Statesman tweeted a photo of Lawrence with her bundled-up co-stars and added, “This is such a quietly depressing (and revealing) image. Not least because I’ve been outside today and it’s bloody FREEZING.”

Many critics presumed Lawrence had not chosen the outfit herself, implying it represente­d persisting gender inequality in Hollywood. Jezebel, for example, began its post by calling out her stylists: “If you’re looking at a woman and she is appropriat­ely protected from the ravages of wind and rain, will you forget how hot she is? Yes. Thank you, J. Law’s stylists, for respecting this truth.” Lawrence targeted this notion in her Facebook post.

“That Versace dress was fabulous, you think I’m going to cover that gorgeous dress up with a coat and a scarf ?” she wrote. “I was outside for 5 minutes. I would have stood in the snow for that dress because I love fashion and that was my choice.”

Joel Edgerton, one of the pictured co-stars, chimed in on the issue via an interview with Yahoo Movies UK.

“Yesterday, on the balcony, seemed like a lose-lose situation because if Jennifer wore jeans and a coat I’m sure somebody else would have criticized her,” he said. “At some point it seemed like the weather was blamed because it was the optics, plus the weather, plus the four of us in our outfits. ... It seems like everywhere Jennifer goes she’s part of some internatio­nal incident.”

He added, “The body-shaming and outfit-shaming that goes on in the perishable internet media is really disappoint­ing.”

Much of the “shaming ” was on Twitter, a site of frequent outrage, and one Lawrence has spoken against in the past. While promoting a Hunger Games film in 2014, soon after a hacker leaked nude photos of the actress, she vowed to never join the social network.

“I’m not very good on phones or technology,” she told BBC Radio 1. “I cannot really keep up with emails, so the idea of Twitter is so unthinkabl­e to me. I don’t really understand what it is, it’s this weird enigma that people talk about. And it’s fine, I respect that, but no, I will never get a Twitter.”

The actress deemed this incident an overreacti­on.

“This is sexist, this is ridiculous, this is not feminism,” she wrote. “Over-reacting about everything someone says or does, creating controvers­y over silly innocuous things such as what I choose to wear or not wear, is not moving us forward. It’s creating silly distractio­ns from real issues.”

 ??  ?? “That Versace dress was fabulous,” Jennifer Lawrence said to critics of her photo call outfit. “Everything you see me wear is my choice.”
“That Versace dress was fabulous,” Jennifer Lawrence said to critics of her photo call outfit. “Everything you see me wear is my choice.”

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