The film and TV roles Reese Witherspoon has created for women challenge stereotypes. And viewers are responding to these more complex, nuanced roles with a resounding thumbs-up!
‘What did you want to be when you were five years old?’
That was one of the questions put to Reese Witherspoon during The Hollywood Reporter’s (THR) Drama Actress Roundtable discussion about sexism in Hollywood. And for anyone following Reese’s trajectory, her answer was unsurprising: ‘The first female president of the United States of America!’ Some cheeky little boys in her kindergarten class laughed when she said that, but fortunately her female teacher was quick to come in with a positive retort: ‘I’ll be the first one to vote for you.’
With credits for directing, producing and acting to her name, Reese is one of the most powerful women in Hollywood today, and is a strong advocate for changing the perception of women in society.
‘Women make up 50 percent of the population, and we should be playing 50 percent of the roles on screen,’ she says. ‘We need more female surgeons, supreme-court justices and soldiers – but on screen. Not just as the girlfriends to famous men.’ At the same THR roundtable session, Reese noted that great strides have been made in this respect: ‘The thing I particularly enjoy about the evolution of television is that we have the opportunity to show the entire spectrum of human emotion that women have. We aren’t just the wives and the girlfriends. We’re actually living, breathing people who have insecurities.’
It’s fair to credit Reese with contributing a great deal to this progress. Not content to simply talk the talk, she started her own production company, Pacific Standard, in 2012, with the stated aim of ‘seeing different, dynamic women on film’. And with the huge successes of Gone Girl, Wild and, of course, the TV series Big Little Lies, Reese has certainly achieved that.
This story is from the March 2018 edition of Fairlady.
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This story is from the March 2018 edition of Fairlady.
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