The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Time’s Up will be a part of Oscar show, but no dress code

-

The organizers of Time’s Up say the movement to eradicate discrimina­tion in the workplace will have a presence at Sunday’s Oscar show, but there are no plans for a redcarpet dress code.

Shonda Rhimes, Ava DuVernay, actresses Laura Dern and Tessa Thompson, producer Katie McGrath and attorney Nina Shaw talked about the movement’s progress and next steps with news reporters Thursday.

They stressed that while Time’s Up made a splashy appearance at the Golden Globes earlier this year, with most women wearing black and several actresses walking the red carpet with activists, the movement is bigger and broader than awards shows.

“We’re trying to build something that’s sustainabl­e, lasting and serious,” DuVernay said Thursday at the meeting at the Sunshine Sachs publicity firm’s offices in West Hollywood, California.

Time’s Up was “launched on the red carpet, but was never intended to live there,” Rhimes said.

Besides the black dresses at the Globes, Time’s Up supporters wore white roses at the Grammy Awards. No such uniformity is planned for the Oscars.

Formed after the Harvey Weinstein scandal revealed widespread sexual harassment in Hollywood, Time’s Up has grown into an internatio­nal, multifacet­ed and multiprong­ed approach to fighting workplace discrimina­tion, organizers said. They outlined the various avenues of the effort at Thursday’s news conference.

A key element is the legal defense fund, which has amassed $21 million and scores of attorneys to date. In partnershi­p with the National Women’s Law Center, the fund connects victims of harassment or discrimina­tion with attorneys, who are either volunteeri­ng their services or having their fees underwritt­en by donations.

Since Time’s Up was founded about two months ago, it has received some 1,700 requests for legal assistance, said attorney Tina Tchen, a lawyer and former director of the White House Council on Women and Girls. More than 1,200 of those cases have already been referred to attorneys, she said.

The movement may have started in Hollywood, but it’s become global, Rhimes said, with participat­ion in Kenya, South Korea, Pakistan and Kuwait. From the tech sector to farm workers, women are coming together to demand fair treatment, she said.

“The intention really is that a large portion of our leadership will come from other industries,” Rhimes said.

Representa­tives for farm, domestic and restaurant workers have been actively involved in the expanding movement, she said.

On Friday, Time’s Up is announcing its new StoryCorps initiative. StoryCorps is a storytelli­ng collective that invites ordinary people to share tales from their lives, which are eventually uploaded into a Library of Congress collection aimed at fostering greater human understand­ing. The Time’s Up partnershi­p invites women and men to share stories about their lives at work.

It’s not just about sexual harassment, organizers said, but about illuminati­ng what it takes to create fair and equitable workplaces where people of all races, genders and ethnicitie­s are recognized and valued. It’s about seizing on the momentum generated by the outrage over Weinstein and those like him and channeling it toward change.

 ?? PHOTO BY RICHARD SHOTWELL — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, Shonda Rhimes attends the “Scandal” 100th Episode Celebratio­n at Fig & Olive in West Hollywood.
PHOTO BY RICHARD SHOTWELL — INVISION — AP, FILE In this file photo, Shonda Rhimes attends the “Scandal” 100th Episode Celebratio­n at Fig & Olive in West Hollywood.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States