The Scotsman

Macdonald calls for end to ‘madness’ of male-dominated film industry at launch

- By BRIAN FERGUSON Arts Correspond­ent

Scottish actress Kelly Macdonald has called for an end to the “madness” of the maledomina­ted film industry as the movie in which she takes her first lead role for more than 20 years was unveiled in Edinburgh.

The Boardwalk Empire, Gosford Park and Trainspott­ing star admitted she felt “so lucky” to still be appearing on screen due to the lack of roles for women over 40.

Speaking before heading down the red carpet to launch her new drama Puzzle at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festival’s opening night, Macdonald said a lack of women in senior roles in the industry was to blame.

Macdonald said it was “very rare” for her to have come across any female directors during a career stretching back to her debut in Trainspott­ing in 1996.

And she said film and television were lagging behind the world of literature when it came to creating interestin­g female characters.

In Puzzle – directed by Little Miss Sunshine producer Marc Turtletaub – Macdonald plays a woman in her early 40s who attempts to escape a stifling home life with her husband and two sons after discoverin­g she has a knack for solving jigsaw puzzles.

Macdonald, who turned 42 earlier this year, described Puzzle as a “coming-of-age” film. It is her first lead onscreen role since Stella Does Tricks, which was released the same year as Trainspott­ing, although more recently she provided the voice for the character of Merida in the animated film Brave.

Macdonald said: “I just feel so lucky to still get a job at all.

“I’ve read and listened to so film and then a few years later I played his love interest. I joke with him that I’m going to play his gran next. That’s the way it seems to go for females.

“There are just not as many roles for women, which is a real shame, because I’m sure the material is out there. In literature there are so many female characters, but film and television just seem a bit slow on the uptake and when parts do come up they are so highly coveted.

“It’s quite a good time for this film. It’s a conversati­on that needed to be had. In a business sense, it seems madness to me because there is a huge audience out there.

“Women make up the majority of the cinema-going public. You would think if you were a business person in film you would want to utilise that more.”

Growing numbers of actresses have been speaking out over the poor representa­tion in front of and behind the camera, highlighti­ng how men are still dominating nomination­s for the major awards.

Latest figures revealed that women made up just 18 per cent of the directors, writers, producers, editors and cinematogr­aphers who worked on the top 250 Hollywood films released last year.

Macdonald added: “It’s definitely the case that if you go to any kind of film event, it is mostly men in the room. It’s very rare that I have worked with a female director.

Women are beginning to come up in this world.”

 ??  ?? 0 Kelly Macdonald and Marc Turtletaub at the premier of Puzzle at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival
0 Kelly Macdonald and Marc Turtletaub at the premier of Puzzle at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Film Festival

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