Albuquerque Journal

Getting past sex bombs, nerd girls

Female animators draw away clichés

- BY JOHN ROGERS

SANTA CLARITA, Calif. — The California Institute of the Arts was created partly by Walt Disney’s desire to bring more top-flight animators into the profession. And it has during its 47 years, though for a long time almost all were men.

Now, nearly three-quarters of CalArts’ more than 250 animation students are women, and there’s a new goal: ensure that when they land jobs, they get to draw female characters reflective of the real world and not just the nerds, sex bombs, tomboys or ugly villains who proliferat­e now.

“Male villains, for example, can be any shape or size. But female villains are usually in their menopausal or postmenopa­usal phases. They’re older, they’re single, they’re angry,” said Erica Larsen-Dockray, who teaches a class on “The Animated Woman” for CalArts’ experiment­al animation program.

“Then you have the innocent princess,” she added with a chuckle, “whose waist is so small that if she was actually alive, she wouldn’t be able to walk.”

To call attention to that cartoonish reality, CalArts has played host the past two years to “The Animated Woman Symposium on Gender Bias.” This year it focused on the roles of “Sidekicks, Nerd Girls, Tomboys and More.”

During a recent raucous twohour symposium, nearly a dozen student researcher­s who spent months watching cartoons and reading comic books questioned why almost all female sidekicks look like nerds. Also why female heroes like Kim Possible are over-the-top beautiful. And why there are so few gay, lesbian and transgende­r characters.

“What are nerd-girl stereotype­s? They have glasses, they’re shy, they’re awkward, they have some freckles going on,” said film-video student and artist Madison Stubbs as she flashed drawings of several, including two of the most popular: Velma from “ScoobyDoo” and Meg Griffin of “Family Guy.”

“And we have Tootie from ‘Fairly OddParents,’” Stubbs said of the long-running Nickelodeo­n cartoon show’s pig-tailed, braces-wearing, bespectacl­ed sidekick. “Basically, she’s just in the show to go, ‘Oh, Timmy. I want you. Why do you ignore me?’”

Not that all female cartoon sidekicks are unattracti­ve.

Velma could be the “hot girl,” Stubbs said, if only she would lose those nerdy glasses. But every time she does, she trips over stuff, walks into things and nearly upends another paranormal investigat­ion by those meddling kids from Scooby-Doo Mystery Incorporat­ed.

Kim Possible, who couples her intellect with martial-arts skills to scuttle nefarious Dr. Drakken’s plans to take over the world, has her own problems. Unable to attract any handsome, smart guy, she ultimately settles for her nerdy male sidekick, Ron Stoppable.

There’s a reason for such drawings and scenarios, said Marge Dean, president of the industry group Women in Animation: Men still fill animation’s writing rooms and director’s chairs.

“Many, many, many women are going to animation schools. At CalArts, it’s over 70 percent. But yet if you start looking at women in creative roles, the last number we have is only 22 percent,” said Dean, whose organizati­on tracks figures through schools and industry groups.

In an effort to boost those numbers, CalArts faculty invites studio representa­tives to campus for events like portfolio days and maintains a close relationsh­ip with groups like Dean’s, which is pushing the studios to have a creative workforce of half women and half men by 2025.

CalArts, with a student enrollment of nearly 1,500, offers graduate and undergradu­ate degrees in such fields as animation, art, music, film, acting, photograph­y and others.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ajani Russell with her artwork “Female Figures” prior to the Animated Women Symposium in December 2016 at California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, Calif.
MARK J. TERRILL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Ajani Russell with her artwork “Female Figures” prior to the Animated Women Symposium in December 2016 at California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, Calif.

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