Yorkshire Post

Star told she would not work after 40

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SUSAN SARANDON has said she was told early on in her acting career that she would not work beyond 40.

The 71-year-old said there are so many women in her age group who are now working because female film-makers are pushing to make money by telling the stories of older women on screen. She said she identified with the inherent sexism experience­d by 1940s film star and inventor Hedy Lamarr, whose story is told in new documentar­y Bombshell:

The Hedy Lamarr Story, which has been executive-produced by Sarandon.

Of starting her career in the early 1970s, Sarandon told the i newspaper: “I was told you were done by the time you’re 40 and you definitely shouldn’t talk about having children, because that made you less sexy.”

She added: “I’m still working, and there are tonnes of other women working around my age, and the main reason for that is female producers and female writers and directors and people who are willing to try and get money for a female-driven story where all the characters are not 22. Otherwise, there just aren’t that many stories of older men and women. I mean there are stories of older men but they always have 30-year-old girlfriend­s.”

Sarandon said there is a real importance in “showing women that are the protagonis­ts in their own lives”.

The actress, who has starred in films including Thelma And Louise, The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Atlantic City, added: “It’s not doing anybody a favour. It’s really just reflecting this amazing world we live in and the stories and heroes that exist.”

The full interview is in the i newspaper, out now.

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