Daily Mail

Why stripping can be empowering, by Handmaid’s Tale author Atwood

- By Eleanor Sharples TV and Radio Reporter

MARGARET Atwood has defended women’s right to work in strip clubs, saying it can be ‘empowering’ and make them feel ‘in control of a room’.

The Handmaid’s Tale author said dancers in the clubs should be allowed to make their own decisions about how they earn money.

The 79-year-old was responding to a debate over strip club licensing which has divided opinion among feminists, with critics arguing the industry is outdated and exploitati­ve.

The debate has attracted attention this week ahead of the release of the film Hustlers, starring Jennifer Lopez as a stripper who scams wealthy customers.

Miss Atwood, who published The Testaments this week, told BBC Radio 5 Live’s Emma Barnett: ‘A lot of women actually do find [stripping] empowering. They feel that they’re in control of the room when they’re doing that.

‘But it depends very much on whether they are being exploited or not, whether someone is taking all the money... or whether they are in control of it.’

But Miss Atwood, who has put climate change at the centre of her dystopian novels, suggested there are bigger issues that need debating. ‘I’m saying you can do that [debate stripping] if you want,’ she said.

‘But my choice would be to put it with something that’s going to change the needle on climate, because if we don’t solve that we’re all going to stop breathing and then it won’t matter who’s got their clothes on and who’s got their clothes off.’

She added: ‘If it’s a choice a woman has made ... and you get paid much better for it than if you’re working a shift in a coffee chain, then why are you not going to let that woman make that choice?’

United Voices of the World, which represents strippers in the UK, welcomed Miss Atwood’s comments and stressed ‘the need to fight against exploitati­on’.

‘In control of the room’

Hustlers (15) Verdict: A story of naked greed ★★★✩✩ AFTER her prolific early career, Jennifer Lopez doesn’t appear in many films these days. But this is not the week to observe that we don’t see much of her, because in Hustlers we see most of her.

It is a film inspired by a true story, about a bunch of stripper/prostitute­s who prey on wealthy customers, drugging the men and fraudulent­ly using their credit cards.

Lopez is terrific, and while I can’t claim to be an expert, it’s hard to imagine even a profession­al poledancer looking more at ease astride a pole.

She plays Ramona, an experience­d stripper who acts as mentor to newcomer Destiny (Constance Wu), and teaches her all the pole moves — the stag, the reverse stag, the scissor-sit, the half-nelson, or maybe I’m beginning to think back to ITV’s Saturday-afternoon wrestling. At any rate, there’s quite a repertoire.

The story pings between 2007 and 2014, when a journalist (Julia Stiles) piecing the story together interviews all the protagonis­ts.

Following the 2008 financial crash, pole-dancers suffer a direct hit; the Wall Street bankers don’t flash the cash like they used to.

So Ramona thinks, why don’t the strippers start stripping the assets of bankers who still like to party, and who, after all, were responsibl­e for the mess everyone’s in?

They begin spiking men’s drinks with a cocktail of ketamine and MDMA, two drugs which together make the victims woozily incapable of protecting their pin numbers.

We see this happening a lot, which is where the narrative suffers. This is not a sophistica­ted scam and the film is not The Sting, or American Hustle, or even Ocean’s Eight. It’s simply lots of sleazy men being taken for a sleazy ride.

Writer-director Lorene Scafaria does her best not to make the women look sleazy, too — they’re just trying to earn a buck to support their grannies, kids, themselves — but with limited success. Nor can she stop Hustlers getting rather tiresomely repetitive.

She tries to jolly things up with a lively soundtrack and other devices such as slow-motion, but not even a slow-mo J-Lo can quite overcome the paucity of the plot.

Still, among the largely female audience at the screening I attended, it went down great guns. It would make the perfect hen party film — unless the stags are out on the same night, heading for a strip joint.

 ??  ?? In the spotlight: Jennifer Lopez stars in Hustlers
In the spotlight: Jennifer Lopez stars in Hustlers
 ??  ?? Support: Margaret Atwood
Support: Margaret Atwood
 ??  ?? top form: Jennifer Lopez
top form: Jennifer Lopez

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