National Post

Stone fails to break glass ceiling

IT MAY HAVE BEEN A BANNER YEAR FOR WOMEN IN THE MOVIES, BUT REALITIES ARE STILL DISCOURAGI­NG

- Ann Hornaday

The only major upset at the Oscars on Sunday night occurred late in the proceeding­s, when Emma Stone won the Academy Award for best actress, upending expectatio­ns that the honour would go to Lily Gladstone.

Stone, who won her first Oscar in 2017 for her performanc­e in La La Land, seemed as surprised as anyone that she was onstage instead of Gladstone, who was poised to make history as the first Native American actress to win an Academy Award. (Gladstone had won a clutch of pre-oscars honours, including a SAG Award; both actresses won Golden Globes.) But few would argue that Stone didn’t deserve the award for her performanc­e in Poor Things, a feat of transforma­tion and commitment. As Bella Baxter, a girl-woman coming into consciousn­ess with reckless abandon and insatiable intellectu­al curiosity, Stone delivered perhaps the bravest — and most bananas — turn of her career.

What’s more, she did it without the benefit of the kind of show-stopping speech that so often garners a best actress nod. Witness Sandra Hüller’s stemwinder for the ages in the psychologi­cal thriller Anatomy of a Fall, when her character subjects her husband to a withering diagnosis of his insecurity, competitiv­eness and resentment. Or Nyad, in which Annette Bening rarely missed a chance to riff on long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad’s mantra of “never give up.” Carey Mulligan had not just one but two dazzling soliloquie­s in Maestro, in which her character, Felicia Bernstein, first calls out her husband, Leonard, on his ego and selfishnes­s, then later admits her own role as enabler while having lunch with his sister (Sarah Silverman).

Interestin­gly, Stone and Gladstone were the two best actress nominees this year who didn’t have the kind of showy monologues that usually gain awards attention. Stone’s performanc­e was remarkable in its intense physicalit­y, intellectu­al acuity, mercurial changeabil­ity and ungovernab­le appetite; Gladstone, who played victimized Osage tribe member Mollie Burkhart in Killers of the Flower Moon, was the epitome of watchful, morally galvanizin­g silence. In a year when many women on screen spoke their minds, Gladstone’s achievemen­t hinged on keeping the quiet part inside, even as her silence spoke volumes. They were both indelible, one by going big, the other by going small.

In the supporting actress race, the same dynamic played out: Although nominee America Ferrera delivered the most famous movie speech of 2023 when her character laid out the double binds of contempora­ry womanhood in Barbie, it was Da’vine Joy Randolph who took home the Oscar, not for the words she spoke in The Holdovers as much as for the accumulati­on of small, exquisitel­y observed moments she brought to life as a lonely grieving mother.

The strength of this year’s crop of actress nominees reflected an uncommonly potent year for women in the movies: Not only did Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie make the year’s biggest film with Barbie, but Oppenheime­r, their closest box office competitor and the night’s biggest winner with seven awards, owed much of its success to its “badass producer” Emma Thomas (so described by the film’s Oscar-winning editor, Jennifer Lane) and Nbcunivers­al chairman and chief content officer Donna Langley, who put her studio’s resources behind the risky propositio­n that a demanding, dialogue-heavy period piece about a nuclear physicist could be a crowd-pleaser.

Even the winner for best song couched its polemic in hushed tones, when Billie Eilish delivered one of the evening’s most powerful moments in a tremulous, utterly transfixin­g performanc­e of Barbie’s What Was I Made For?

This kind of split-screen effect — deep-seated anger channelled through whispers instead of screams — amounted to the pop culture equivalent of the sea of white-suited Democratic women who attended U.S. President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address last week — an impressive demonstrat­ion of collective resolve, until one was reminded of the wider context of regression and outright hostility.

Those political realities, it turns out, are just as sobering within Hollywood itself: Although women might have been triumphing on screen, behind the scenes, they weren’t doing nearly as well. When movie industry researcher­s Stacy L. Smith and Martha Lauzen recently released their annual studies of women in the film business, the statistics were dismal: Smith found that women accounted for only 12 per cent of directors of the top 100 movies in 2023; when it came to acting, only 30 of the top 100 films featured a woman in a leading or co-leading role, the same ratio as in 2010. Looking at the top 250 films, Lauzen was just as discouragi­ng in her findings: “While 75 per cent of the top grossing films employed 10 or more men as directors, writers, producers, executive producers, editors, and cinematogr­aphers,” she wrote in her annual Celluloid Ceiling report, “just four per cent employed 10 or more women.”

Sunday’s Oscars reflected an industry taking baby steps toward progress: Women and people of colour were represente­d in acting and writing categories, as well as editing, costume design, hair and makeup, and production design.

Still, when Stone grasped her Oscar for Poor Things, the distance between the unfettered potential of her character and the constraint­s still bedevillin­g women in real life couldn’t have been more dramatic. The biggest takeaway seems to be that Hollywood loves a liberated woman, as long as her freedom comes packaged as an outré fairy tale suffused with sex and alluring steampunk esthetics.

Although Gladstone didn’t take home an award, her achievemen­t as the first Native American nominee in her category will understand­ably be celebrated as a symbol of how far she’s come within a medium built on narratives that chronicall­y caricature­d, demonized and humiliated Native Americans. It should also stand as a rebuke to the industry that made that achievemen­t historic in the first place.

When it comes to upending the social order, real empowermen­t isn’t adorable, or easy. Whether they’re delivered from the screen, from within or from a podium, even the best speeches are no substitute for lasting and far more difficult change.

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Emma Stone’s Oscar win for Poor Things was well earned, but the film itself seems to suggest a woman’s quest for freedom is best celebrated as a fairy tale saturated in sex.
EVAN AGOSTINI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Emma Stone’s Oscar win for Poor Things was well earned, but the film itself seems to suggest a woman’s quest for freedom is best celebrated as a fairy tale saturated in sex.

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