Call & Times

Hollywood’s woman power not always reflected in casting

Male characters still predominat­e nearly two to one

- By SONIA RAO

With the birth of the #MeToo movement and success of movies like "Wonder Woman," 2017 was an empowering for women in Hollywood. But the year's top films may not have reflected as much.

Though 100 appears to be a small sample size, the study analyzed more than 2,300 characters in those films. Even when considerin­g those billed lower than the leads, female represen- tation did not improve much in 2017. Around 37 percent of all major characters were women, the same number as 2016, while the percentage of speaking characters increased just 2 points to 34 percent.

Despite a roughly 50-50 gender balance in the world's population, moviegoers were almost twice as likely to see male characters on screen.

Female characters also remained younger than their male equivalent­s. Most women on screen were in their 20s (32 percent) or 30s (25 percent), whereas men tended to be in their 30s (31 percent) or 40s (27 percent). Women 40 and over comprised 29 percent of all female characters, while the same number for men reached 46 percent.

It seems bleak, but the data shows that female characters have thrived in certain environmen­ts. Among those top 100 movies, indie films accounted for 65 percent of sole female protagonis­ts, versus studio features' 35 percent. Their male counterpar­ts were more likely to appear in studio projects (54 percent) than indies (46 percent). This year's Oscar nomination­s highlight several of the female indie film characters, such as Lady Bird McPherson (Saoirse Ronan) of "Lady Bird," Mildred Hayes (Frances McDormand) of "Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri" and more.

Thirty percent of female protagonis­ts were in comedies (think Regina Hall's Ryan Pierce of "Girls Trip") and that same figure applies to drama (Dakota Johnson's Anastasia Steele of "Fifty Shades Darker"), while the figures for men were 20 percent and 13 percent, respective­ly. Action stars like Lorraine Broughton (Charlize Theron) of "Atomic Blonde" made up 17 percent of the female protagonis­ts, contrastin­g with 38 percent for men. Thirteen percent of female leads came from horror films, while animated and science fiction features represente­d 4 percent each.

Racial diversity improved among on-screen women in 2017. The percentage of white characters dropped 8 percent from 2016, coming in at 68 percent. The percentage of black women jumped up 2 points, reaching 16 percent. Latina and Asian women each comprised 7 percent of all characters, a 4-point increase for the former and a 1-point increase for the latter.

The data found that representa­tion among directors and writers often correspond­ed with better numbers for their actors. In movies with at least one female director or writer, women made up 45 percent of protagonis­ts and 48 percent of major charac- ters. In films directed or written entirely by men, women made up just 20 percent of protagonis­ts and 33 percent of major characters.

Correlatio­n does not imply causation, of course. And as Natalie Portman called out at the Golden Globes, Hollywood still has work to do when it comes to providing opportunit­ies for female directors. A study published last month by the University of Southern California's Annenberg Inclusion Initiative found that just eight out of the 109 people who directed 2017's100 highest-grossing movies were women. One of them, Greta Gerwig, is nominated for an Academy Award.

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