Yorkshire Post

‘Let’s put women in charge of movies’

New initiative aims to break glass ceiling by shattering male domination of film-making in region

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

Yorkshire is backing efforts to break the glass ceiling holding women back in the movie industry as a new project, Female Film Force, was launched to capitalise on the climate change triggered by Hollywood’s sex scandals.

SINCE THE dawn of Hollywood, when the first women directors were pushed off the set and reinvented as “script girls”, it has been a man’s world.

Even in today’s climate of “Time’s Up” and “#Me Too” protest movements, the entertainm­ent industry remains dominated, one of its leaders said last night, by a “golden circle” of mostly men, among whom the best jobs are divided.

Kate Kinninmont, head of Women in Film and Television, warned that producers would never harness the best talent in Britain if they stuck to the “same old, same old”.

Launching a new film-making initiative, she said: “Women made the first-ever narrative films, and then once it became an industry and went to Hollywood and financiers got involved, women got pushed aside into jobs where they were taking care of things rather than directing and writing themselves.

“In the 21st century, more young women than young men come out of our film schools, and yet when we look at what is happening in feature films, things really haven’t got better.”

Her new project, Female Film Force, sponsored by the dating service, Bumble, and aiming to capitalise on the climate change triggered by Hollywood’s season of sex scandals, will see five female teams handed £20,000 each to make a short film.

“This is a year of change,” Ms Kinninmont said. “Now companies are phoning up saying, ‘Have you got any woman directors?’ Suddenly it’s all changed.”

After decades of dismissal, a similar wind of change is blowing through the production industry in Yorkshire, other experts said.

Ruth Pitt, a journalist who became one of the North’s most successful independen­t producers, said the region had its own “golden circle” which had historical­ly downplayed the role of women.

Their contributi­on to the success of Yorkshire Television had been largely ignored in the station’s 50th anniversar­y celebratio­ns last month, she said.

“It’s partly because of that lack of encouragem­ent that women don’t see themselves doing the big jobs, and it becomes selfperpet­uating,” Ms Pitt said.

Noting that this was also the 50th anniversar­y of the seminal Mel Brooks comedy, The

Producers, she added: “He had no experience as a director and yet he persuaded the studio to let him direct it. I just wonder whether they would have taken the same risk on a woman.

“It’s about women not seeing anybody else doing the job and therefore not seeing themselves doing it.

“But it is now changing. There’s a tipping point, and ironically women are now employing in their own image, so they’re probably more likely to take on other women.” The casting as the new

Doctor Who of Jodie Whittaker, who is from Skelmantho­rpe, near Huddersfie­ld, is the most recent shattering of the glass ceiling. And Yorkshire’s roster of top screenwrit­ers includes Kay Mellor, who created Fat

Friends, Sally Wainwright, who wrote Last Tango In Halifax, and Gwyneth Hughes, who is behind this season’s ITV adaptation of Thackeray’s Vanity Fair.

Another of their number, Leeds-based Lisa Holdsworth, who has written for Channel Four’s Ackley Bridge, said: “Part of the problem is the riskaversi­on that broadcaste­rs and producers seem to suffer from. And what seems to constitute a risk is anyone who isn’t white, straight, able-bodied and male.

“But with such a plethora of viewing options now available, UK producers and broadcaste­rs are genuinely at risk if they do not start catering for a diverse audience. They will simply go elsewhere for entertainm­ent.”

 ?? PICTURES: PA WIRE ?? WOMEN ON SCREEN: Above, Sunetra Sarker as Kaneez, Jo Joyner as Mandy and Liz White as Emma in Channel 4’s Ackley Bridge; from left, cast members from Last Tango In Halifax, Sarah Lancashire, Anne Reid, Derek Jacobi and Nicola Walker; successful producer Ruth Pitt; the new female Doctor taking on the Tardis, Yorkshire’s Jodie Whittaker.
PICTURES: PA WIRE WOMEN ON SCREEN: Above, Sunetra Sarker as Kaneez, Jo Joyner as Mandy and Liz White as Emma in Channel 4’s Ackley Bridge; from left, cast members from Last Tango In Halifax, Sarah Lancashire, Anne Reid, Derek Jacobi and Nicola Walker; successful producer Ruth Pitt; the new female Doctor taking on the Tardis, Yorkshire’s Jodie Whittaker.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom