‘WE NEED TO CHANGE THE CULTURE’
Canadian film and TV leaders addressing ‘prevalent’ sexual harassment
Canadian film and TV leaders are acknowledging that sexual harassment has also been a “prevalent” part of the entertainment industry here and have planned a meeting to discuss how to tackle it.
In the wake of the allegations against fallen Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, writer-director James Toback and others, the union representing Canadian actors, ACTRA, has had preliminary meetings with industry groups and is preparing for a broader meeting Nov. 23 in Toronto.
On the agenda: how they can work together to implement practical measures to tackle sexual misconduct in a way that also leads to cultural change.
“It’s prevalent in our industry for both men and women, but it’s cultural as well,” ACTRA national treasurer Theresa Tova said.
“This is something that’s been going on forever and we need to change the culture. And I’m 150 per cent in support of making sure that the responsibility, the pressure, the weight of this abuse doesn’t land on the victims, (that) there are some processes industry-wide where we can all work together.”
Tova said ACTRA doesn’t have numbers on how many cases of sexual harassment and assault have been reported in the Canadian film and TV industry.
But in a statement on its website, the Directors Guild of Canada says: “The rot of harassment in film and television runs far deeper than one man and extends every bit as much into our country as any other.”
ACTRA says the industry as a whole needs to figure out how to prevent, report and track sexual misconduct. It also needs to create a safe space for victims to speak out without fear of retribution.
Other groups involved in the meeting include the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, which has “a zero-tolerance policy against abuse and sexual harassment” — but currently that’s only for its employees and board members.
“We don’t have a code of conduct or similar for our membership and that is something that could be a part of how we respond to this,” said academy CEO Beth Janson.
Since the Weinstein scandal broke last month, several stories of sexual harassment or assault have emerged from Canada’s entertainment scene, including allegations against Just For Laughs founder Gilbert Rozon and Quebec media personality Eric Salvail.
Meanwhile, Canadian actresses including Erika Rosenbaum, Mia Kirshner and Sarah Polley have shared stories about alleged encounters with Weinstein, while Rachel McAdams and Chantal Cousineau spoke out with allegations about Toback.
Montreal-based writer-producer Leila Basen says she’s experienced sexual harassment since the start of her career in the late 1970s.
“When I began my career, it was just a pervasive, daily part of your work life,” said Basen, a creative producer and writer for Heartland.
“Nobody called it sexual harassment. Nobody had a framework to put it in. If you were young, ambitious with big dreams, you wiggled out of difficult situations. “Tried not to repeat them.” It was during her first job out of film school, as a production assistant in a newsroom, that harassment “crossed the line into assault.
“I was standing on a table fixing a monitor and a sportscaster sticks his hand under my skirt. I was so shocked, I fell off the table and hurt myself,” Basen said.
“I told my boss what happened. The sportscaster got a slap on the wrist.”
Basen is encouraged by the #metoo movement, in which women are sharing stories of sexual harassment and assault on social media.
But Canadian actress Lucy DeCoutere feels the conversations happening now are the same ones that took place around the 2016 sexual-assault trial of former CBC star Jian Ghomeshi.
“This isn’t new. It’s incredibly frustrating,” said DeCoutere, who was among the women who accused Ghomeshi of sexual assault.
A judge acquitted him on all four charges of sexual assault and one count of overcoming resistance by choking.
“The whole thing is just a reminder that women are assaulted by men and that men have nothing really tangible to say about how to fix it. They keep saying this is a watershed moment but they said that about the Ghomeshi situation, which unfolded in the exact same way.”
Polley, who detailed her experiences with sexual harassment in a New York Times Op-Ed, is similarly fearful that the current wave of momentum may not lead to change.
She spoke last week at an event for her TV series Alias Grace in Toronto and said it’s “an astonishing moment as a woman in this industry to realize that we’re going to take women seriously about this.”
But she added: “Moving forward as we enter into different police forces looking at charges, that’s when I start to wonder — are we all powerful enough to rally around these people, these people who have come forward, when we’re faced with a judicial system that hasn’t changed at all?”