Las Vegas Review-Journal

A league of her own

25 years after starring in beloved baseball movie, Geena Davis has become heavy hitter off camera

- By Mark Olsen Los Angeles Times

IT’S been 25 years since Geena Davis starred in “A League of Their Own,” a film that broke ground not only for its strong, mostly female cast but because it was a major film directed by a woman, Penny Marshall.

Released July 1, 1992, the film was based on the true story of an allwomen baseball league started during World War II and went on to become a beloved, and still all too rare, female-centered sports film. Coming out just a year after she and Susan Sarandon made movie history by driving their 1966 Ford Thunderbir­d into the Grand Canyon, “League” helped seal Davis’ place in Hollywood as a feminist voice.

Davis, who won an Oscar in 1989 for “The Accidental Tourist,” was nominated for a Golden Globe for her role in “League,” which also starred Tom Hanks, Lori Petty, Rosie O’donnell, Jon Lovitz and Madonna.

After winning a Golden Globe in 2006 for the TV series “Commander in

Chief ” — playing a female U.S. president — she has continued to move between television and movies.

In January, she was at Sundance with the film “Marjorie Prime” and has in the past few years appeared on TV’S “The Exorcist” and “Grey’s Anatomy.”

Beyond her acting roles, however, she has become a real force off camera.

She founded the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, which conducts research to create statistics around gender and diversity representa­tion in entertainm­ent. And she co-founded the Bentonvill­e Film Festival in Bentonvill­e, Arkansas, dedicated to supporting women and diversity in the entertainm­ent industry. At this year’s festival, she participat­ed in a celebrator­y baseball game to mark the anniversar­y of “A League of Their Own,” which was recently released in a new Blu-ray edition.

In this interview, Davis talks about “A League of Their Own” and how she’s still having many of the same conversati­ons about women in Hollywood that she did when the film was first released.

Times: If “A League of Their Own” were coming out today, the fact that it’s a little-known story of women’s history with a mostly female cast and a female director would be much talked about. How did people respond to the movie at the time?

Davis: Reporters came to the set to interview us, and I noticed immediatel­y that they all asked at some point, “Do you think this is a feminist movie?” Sort of conspirato­rial, like, “I’m not really saying this out loud” sort of a thing and like, “Wouldn’t it be weird if you actually said yes?”

And I would say yes. And they would say, “What, you do? Can I say that you said that?” And I was like, yes, you can. I mean, what’s your definition of feminist? Feminist means believing in equal rights and opportunit­ies, and this is about women playing baseball. So it’s about women can play too.

But they were horrified; it was like I had said something horrifying and they generously wanted to be sure I wanted to allow them to print that I had said that.

Are things much better now?

No, although I don’t think they’d whisper the question. But as far as the perception of it when it came out, I noticed there was so much prognostic­ating that this would change everything.

Now that there’s been a tremendous hit, a very successful movie starring women, there were going to be so many female sports movies. And I particular­ly noticed that because when I had done “Thelma and Louise,” which came out a year earlier, it was the same thing, the press was saying, this changes everything. There are going to be so many female road pictures, female buddy pictures, just more movies starring women because it struck such a nerve.

And neither prediction proved to be true whatsoever.

Was the movie pivotal for you personally?

It was huge. It was very pivotal to my life in multiple ways. One was experienci­ng the reaction of young girls to the movie and so many girls and young women saying, “I took up sports because of that movie.” I still have the same number of girls and women telling me they play sports because of that movie now as I did then. It’s like a rite of passage to see this movie. It’s got remarkable longevity.

Also, just on a personal level, I had never really played any sports, and I definitely couldn’t play baseball when I got cast.

And so I trained really hard, and it was the first time that I was told that I had untapped athletic ability, which was an incredible compliment in my book, and so I felt like I really did, and it changed everything about my self-esteem and my self-confidence . ...

Learning to play a sport really changed my life. I became a trustee of the Women’s Sports Foundation for 10 years, I had a website encouragin­g girls to know their rights through Title

IX, and then eventually I took up archery because of that and at 41 became a semifinali­st at the Olympic Trials three years later. So it had a very big and lasting impact on my life.

In “A League of Their Own,” did you really catch that pop-up fly ball behind your back?

I did. I figured out if you let the ball come right at your head, line yourself up so the ball is coming straight at your head and then duck your head forward as it comes, it will go right down your back. It turned out to be really easy, actually, once I figured out the physics of it.

 ?? Taylor Jewel ?? The Associated Press “It had a very big and lasting impact on my life,” Geena Davis says of “A League of Their Own.”
Taylor Jewel The Associated Press “It had a very big and lasting impact on my life,” Geena Davis says of “A League of Their Own.”

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