The Daily Telegraph

Women must take blame for sexual harassment, says actress Dame Angela

Star of BBC’S Christmas schedule says abuse takes place because victims make themselves attractive

- By Anita Singh ARTS AND ENTERTAINM­ENT EDITOR

WOMEN must accept blame for sexual harassment and abuse because they “go out of their way to make themselves attractive” to men, Dame Angela Lansbury has said. While other Hollywood actresses have condemned the stories that have surfaced since the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke, Dame Angela offered a different take.

“There are two sides to this coin. We have to own up to the fact that women, since time immemorial, have gone out of their way to make themselves attractive. And unfortunat­ely it has backfired on us – and this is where we are today.

“We must sometimes take blame, women. I really do think that. Although it’s awful to say we can’t make ourselves look as attractive as possible without being knocked down and raped,” the 92-year-old told Radio Times. She added that the fault does not lie with individual victims: “Should women be prepared for this? No, they shouldn’t have to be. There’s no excuse for that. And I think it will stop now – it will have to. I think a lot of men must be very worried at this point.”

Dame Angela said she had not suffered any harassment during her time as a young actress in Hollywood, where she was signed to MGM studios and earned an Oscar nomination for her first role, in the 1944 film Gaslight.

Her career is still a busy one and she will be on screen this Christmas in a BBC One adaptation of Little Women, as the cantankero­us Aunt March. She is best known to television viewers as Jessica Fletcher in Murder, She Wrote.

Her comments drew a strong response from Rape Crisis England and Wales, which said in a statement: “It is a deeply unhelpful myth that rape and other forms of sexual violence are caused or ‘provoked’ by women’s sexuality or ‘attractive­ness’.

“Rape is an act of sexual violence, power and control that has little to nothing to do with sexual desire. It is as insulting to men as it is to anyone to suggest they’re unable to take responsibi­lity for their own behaviours and that the way a woman presents herself can cause them to lose control or force them to sexually harass or assault her.

“There is no excuse or mitigation for sexual violence and there is no circumstan­ce in which it’s even partially the victim’s or survivor’s fault. Until we accept and acknowledg­e that, it will be very difficult for us as a society to reduce or prevent rape, sexual assault, sexual harassment or sexual abuse.”

The floodgates opened in Hollywood last month when dozens of women came forward to allege they had been victims of sexual misconduct by Harvey Weinstein. He expressed remorse over his behaviour but denied any allegation­s of non-consensual sex.

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