Sunday Times

Hollywood fantasy: no one gets old

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AFTER the #OscarsSoWh­ite and #OscarsSoMa­le criticisms levelled at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in recent years, could #OscarsSoYo­ung point at the lack of age diversity shown in best picture Oscar nominees?

A study has shown that the vast majority of characters in the 25 films nominated for best picture over the past three years have been younger than 60. There were only two leading characters over 60, and both were played by Michael Keaton: in Birdman, in 2014, and Spotlight, the year after.

Stacy Smith, who co-authored the report and has previously published reports into diversity on screen, said: “What seems to be apparent from this investigat­ion is that despite all the discussion about inclusion in Hollywood, seniors are left out of that conversati­on.”

The report also found that older woman characters were even more rare in the 25 films analysed. Less than a quarter, 22.3%, of older characters were women, only one in 10 was from an ethnic group and none was Hispanic.

Only four older women of colour were portrayed across the films, and all of them were African-American. None of the characters over 60 were lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r.

The report said that despite the fact that “the focus on Hollywood’s diversity problem has been unrelentin­g”, few have recognised the lack of senior citizens on screen, despite the fact that the academy has a median age of 62, with only 14% of members under 50.

Older people have emerged as some of film’s biggest supporters in recent years. In the US, people aged 60 and over comprise 18.5% of the population and 14% of box office customers. Between 1995 and 2010, the number of over-50s visiting the cinema increased by 68%.

The UK witnessed a 14% increase in filmgoers over the age of 45 between 1997 and 2008.

By looking only at leading characters over the age of 60, however, the report does exclude a number of actors who were of that age, or playing characters of that age, in recent academy-recognised films.

For example, even though Denzel Washington was nearly 62 when 2017 best picture nominee Fences was released, his character is 53, and therefore excluded.

Jeff Bridges, 67, was not included for his non-leading role in Hell or High Water, nor was 60-year-old Kevin Costner eligible for the report in Hidden Figures.

Katherine Pieper, who wrote the report with Smith and others, explained that their study looked at lead characters because they are “the major force attempting to accomplish the story’s purpose”.

She said: “Typically, but not always, the lead is also the protagonis­t. In some cases, two characters share roughly equivalent screen time, appear within the first five minutes of the film, and/or are equally involved in the journey

“Occasional­ly, three or more characters fit this definition, and these characters constitute an ‘ensemble’.”

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 ??  ?? TOKEN OLDIE: Michael Keaton, left, in ‘Birdman’, stands out in a study of older characters in recent hit movies OLDER AND WISER: Denzel Washington and Viola Davis in ‘Fences’. He was nearly 62 at the time the film was made
TOKEN OLDIE: Michael Keaton, left, in ‘Birdman’, stands out in a study of older characters in recent hit movies OLDER AND WISER: Denzel Washington and Viola Davis in ‘Fences’. He was nearly 62 at the time the film was made

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