The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Why aren’t women allowed in Harvard’s Hasty Pudding shows?

- BY COLLIN BINKLEY

Harvard University’s Hasty Pudding theatre group is 223 years old — and it shows, its critics say, especially in a policy that excludes women from the cast of its annual revue.

On campus and off, some are calling on the troupe to start casting women and to update sexist portrayals of women. Many of those critics are also calling on actress Mila Kunis to reconsider her acceptance of Hasty Pudding’s Woman of the Year award to protest the exclusion. She is scheduled to receive the award on campus today.

“There are women on campus who are more than willing to take advantage of these opportunit­ies, yet they’re still being excluded,’’ said Liz Kantor, a senior at Harvard studying molecular and cellular biology, who auditioned for this year’s show.

Hasty Pudding is known for bawdy comedic revues that feature men in drag playing female characters, a longstandi­ng tradition in the group, which says it was formed in 1795.

But more recently, women have sought acting roles in the student-written parodies, which are shown in Massachuse­tts, New York and Bermuda and have helped launch careers for former students ranging from Jack Lemmon to Broadway composer Larry O’Keefe.

Kantor is among about 20 women who participat­ed in the audition protest this year, an idea started by two women in 2015. Each year, the women have promptly been cut.

Women can instead take behind-the-scenes jobs, including writing the shows or working on the business staff or technical crew, the group says on its website.

Students on Hasty Pudding’s executive board, which is led by a woman and includes several female members, declined to comment for this article. Overall, about half the 50 students involved with the group are women.

The troupe’s all-male cast took cues from the Shakespear­ean era, when men played all roles. Harvard itself admitted only male undergradu­ates until a partial merger with Radcliffe College in 1977.

The group has been criticized for its all-male cast before, including in a 2016 petition from dozens of former members of the group who urged it to accept women.

Kunis has spoken out sharply against sexism in entertainm­ent, including in a defiant 2016 essay. She did not respond to a request for comment.

Others recently named Woman of the Year by the group include Octavia Spencer and Amy Poehler, who cracked a biting joke about the group’s exclusion of women when she accepted the honour in 2015.

“You know it’s time for a change when the Augusta National Golf Club has lapped you in terms of being progressiv­e,’’ Poehler said, referring the Georgia club’s 2012 decision to admit women.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this Jan. 27, 2011 file photo, actress Julianne Moore, centre, named Harvard University’s Hasty Pudding Theatrical­s woman of the year, dances in a kickline with male cast members dressed as women, on the steps of the New College Theatre in...
AP PHOTO In this Jan. 27, 2011 file photo, actress Julianne Moore, centre, named Harvard University’s Hasty Pudding Theatrical­s woman of the year, dances in a kickline with male cast members dressed as women, on the steps of the New College Theatre in...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada