> > forwarded by Michael Hoover
> >
> > > Hey, Hollywood: What's Wrong With This Picture?
> > > Run Date: 09/18/00
> > >
> > > By Jeannine Yeomans
> > > WEnews correspondent
><snip>
> > > New research by Martha Lauzen, Ph.D., a professor at San Diego State
> > > University, reveals that among the 207 top grossing films last year,
> > > women constituted only 17 percent of all creators behind the scenes,
> > > including producers, directors, writers, and editors.
> > >
> > > Only 4 percent of directors were women, a drop from 8 percent the
> > > previous year. There were other significant declines in the numbers of
> > > executive producers from 21 percent to 15 percent, and female editors
> > > from 13 percent to 8 percent. The picture for television is similarly
> > > bleak.

*****   The New York Times
September 15, 2000, Friday, Late Edition - Final
SECTION: Section E; Part 1; Page 25; Column 1; Movies, Performing 
Arts/Weekend Desk
HEADLINE: HOME VIDEO;
Women's Work In the Silent Era
BYLINE:  By Peter M. Nichols

New VHS and DVD editions of "This Is Spinal Tap," Rob Reiner's 1984 
parody of a rock documentary, were released on Tuesday, but some of 
the better entertainment issued this week can be found in two new 
series from the silent era: "First Ladies: Early Women Filmmakers 
1915-25" from Kino and "Equal Time: The Women of Cinema" from 
Milestone

Good silent films hold surprises, not least the people who made them. 
In the earliest days strong women frequently produced and directed 
what they also wrote and starred in. "Women were allowed to work 
because there weren't great profits to be made yet in that industry," 
said Dennis Doros, president of Milestone, a distributor of classic 
films.

Once the money got better in the 1930's, men asserted themselves and 
professional life became more complicated for women like Dorothy 
Davenport Reid, the producer and co-director of "The Red Kimona" 
(1925), about a young girl who is tricked into becoming a prostitute 
in New Orleans and murders her pimp.

The Kino series includes five films, all of them preserved by the 
motion picture department at the Library of Congress. The four others 
are "The Ocean Waif" by Alice Guy-Blache, one of the first directors 
of either sex, who had made more than 700 shorts and features by 
1916; "49-17," a western satire by Ruth Ann Baldwin; "Eleanor's 
Catch" (1916), a two-reeler by Cleo Madison about still another young 
woman done in by a lowdown man; and "Hypocrites" (1915), written, 
directed and produced by Lois Weber.

A colleague of Guy-Blache, Weber was known for her moral crusades. In 
"Hypocrites" the subject was "the naked truth" as envisioned by a 
hand-wringing religious ascetic and sculptor who, inspired by a woman 
scampering in the buff, renders a nude statue of same. On its 
unveiling, the good citizens, all cheats and perverts, to judge by 
Weber's interpretation, are shocked.

Notes on the cassette box call the film "amazingly complex." Bizarre, 
too. "Definitely off the wall," said Jessica Rosner of Kino. "That's 
real nudity. If you look closely, you can see everything." In Boston, 
clothes had to be painted on the woman before the film was 
distributed.

The Milestone series moves on to the talkies with "The Gay Desperado" 
(1936), starring Ida Lupino, and Mervyn LeRoy's "Tonight or Never" 
(1931), with Gloria Swanson as an opera diva who has lost the passion 
for her work. But there are also Frances Marion's silent "Love Light" 
(1921), with Mary Pickford as a betrayed wife, a role intended to 
change her her little-girl image, and two silent films by Nell 
Shipman, "Back to God's Country" (1919) and "Something New" (1920).

Shipman, a conservationist, set her two films in northern Canada and 
the Mojave desert, respectively. "She did action films," Mr. Doros 
said. In "Something New" the heroine (Shipman), her boyfriend and her 
collie, Laddie, escape mounted bandits across rocky terrain in a 
Maxwell sedan, a forerunner of the sport utility vehicle.

For information on the Milestone series, call (800) 603-1104. For the 
Kino tapes, call (800) 562-3330.   *****

Yoshie

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