Gender Inequality in Hollywood
An SDSU study shows women are underrepresented in the film industry.
“The findings indicate that women who direct films actually lost ground in 2016,” Lauzen said. “The current small-scale remedies for women’s under-employment, while they may be well-intentioned and benefit a handful of individuals, are ineffective in addressing this issue. The efforts, such as the mentoring and shadowing programs, are simply too meager to create the kind of shift that is needed.”
In other roles, women accounted for 13 percent of writers, 17 percent of executive producers, 24 percent of producers, 17 percent of editors and five percent of cinematographers. Overall, women comprised 17 percent of individuals working in the roles mentioned. This represents a decline of two percent from 2015 and is even with the figure obtained in 1998.
“Women working in key behind-the-scenes roles have yet to benefit from the current dialogue regarding diversity and inclusion in the film industry,” Lauzen noted.
This year’s study also considers the employment of women on the top 100 and 500 domestic grossing films. The analysis of the top 500 films reveals that features with at least one woman director employ higher percentages of women writers, editors, cinematographers and composers than films with exclusively male directors. For example, on films with female directors, women comprised 64 percent of writers. On films with exclusively male directors, women accounted for nine percent of writers.
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Related Articles:
Los Angeles Times: New study reveals fewer women working behind the scenes in HollywoodThe Huffington Post: Somehow, The Number of Female Directors Got Even Smaller Last Year
Variety: Number of Female Directors Falls Despite Diversity Debate, Says Study