Women 'struggling' in Hollywood, according to new study
Kathryn Bigelow was the first female director to win an Oscar in 2010
Only 9% of directors of the top 250 grossing Hollywood films in 2012 were women, a study has found.
Despite the low figure, it is a 4% increase from 2011's numbers, the Centre for the Study of Women in Television and Film said.
The research found women comprised 18% of all directors, executive producers, writers, cinematographers and editors.
It also showed women were more likely to work in the documentary, drama and animated film genres.
The Centre has been conducting the industry survey for more than a decade to track trends.
The number of female producers has held steady at 25% for the past two years, while female writers rose to 15%, up from a low of 10% in 2006.
The number of female editors between 1998-2012 has remained fairly constant in the 20%-21% range. Cinematographers have fluctuated between 2%-4%, although figures for 2012 were on the low end of the range.
No women have made it onto the shortlist for best director at this year's Oscars, while Zero Dark Thirty is the only best picture nominee to have been directed by a woman - Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelow.
A separate study by the Sundance Institute and Women in Film showed women fared better in the independent film sector.
Looking at films shown at the Sundance Film Festival over the past decade - and accounting for 820 narrative and documentary films - researchers found women represented 29.8% of some 11,000 filmmakers.
There are more women working in documentary films than narrative films, but study director Stacy Smith said her research found that "as commerce moves in, females move out".
Women In Film president Cathy Schulman added: "This data shows us that there is a higher representation of female filmmakers in independent film as compared to Hollywood - but it also highlights the work that is still to be done for women to achieve equal footing in the field."
The study also found that films directed by women employ greater numbers of women behind the camera than those made by men.
The organisers of last year's Cannes Film Festival were criticised when the list of 22 films nominated for its top prize, the Palme d'Or, was entirely made up of male directors.
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Comment number 25.
zakida22nd January 2013 - 15:18
Who cares whether a director is male or female? The best directors more often than not will make the best films which will end up being more successful. Surely that is what matters?
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Comment number 22.
Latitude Infinity22nd January 2013 - 14:39
Artists with original ideas- male or female- are the ones who are struggling in Hollywood. That is, assuming that they haven't given up and gone independent
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Comment number 18.
UnCivil_in_NY22nd January 2013 - 14:38
And? A good filmmaker is passionate about the art, and this requires an investment in the story being told. The question is, is there A: a supply of passionate filmmakeing women who have mysteriously been excluded, and B: is there a market for their stories.
I think this is a supply side problem - lack of competent, invested people rather than an active exclusionary effort.
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Comment number 16.
C2theD22nd January 2013 - 14:29
More interesting would be the financial background/class/education of all those in this who-you-know industry that so many talented people are never given an opportunity in, rather than trying to split the proletariat
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Comment number 3.
john22nd January 2013 - 13:28
Hollywood is a club. It's who you know which can get you a major leg up. If you know no-one that it is the do it yourself method. Make your own movie, and if it succeeds, financially you will get into the club. Male or female. It's just that there are less women doing this. As a male even I can't get in without this approach anymore than a woman. Some can't accept that is just how it is
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Comments 5 of 6