Times Colonist

Study finds male dominance in Hollywood unchanged

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — Women made up just 18 per cent of all the directors, writers, producers, executive producers, editors and cinematogr­aphers who worked on the top 250 American films released last year, according to a new study.

The 20th annual “Celluloid Ceiling” study on the behind-the-camera employment of women was compiled by San Diego State University’s Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film. The results show virtually no change in the past 20 years for women in Hollywood. In 1998, the same calculatio­n of behind-the-scenes jobs for women was 17 per cent.

The study found that in last year’s top 250 films, 25 per cent of producers were women, 11 per cent of directors were women and just four per cent of cinematogr­aphers were women.

“The film industry has utterly failed to address the continuing underemplo­yment of women behind the scenes,” said Martha M. Lauzen, the study’s author. “This negligence has produced a toxic culture that supported the recent sexual-harassment scandals and truncates so many women’s careers.”

Last week, a study published by the University of Southern California Annenberg Foundation found that among the top 100 films at the box office, the percentage of female directors rose to 7.3 per cent in 2017 from 4.2 per cent in 2016. But that number was still less than the eight per cent in 2008.

As they have in the past, the studies give statistica­l evidence to the widespread alarm about gender equality in the film industry. More than 300 women in entertainm­ent recently formed the initiative Time’s Up to push for equal female representa­tion among executives and to help sexual harassment victims defend themselves.

 ??  ?? Writer and television producer Shonda Rhimes. Recent studies give statistica­l evidence to the widespread alarm about gender equality in Hollywood.
Writer and television producer Shonda Rhimes. Recent studies give statistica­l evidence to the widespread alarm about gender equality in Hollywood.

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