I wrote a piece for The Hollywood Reporter in their Women in Hollywood issue. Full link in bio::::::::::::::::: Years ago, I was sitting across the table from a film director who was set to helm the screenplay I had adapted, Paint It Black. We had very strong yet different visions for the movie we hoped to make together, and after many creative discussions, the director told me they didn't feel they were the right director anymore. Because I was. After the director and I parted ways, my producer, Wren Arthur, called me to talk about the idea; I balked, saying I had no real experience. "Don't you, though?" she asked. Did I? There were very few examples for comparison. I've been an actress since I was 11, and in over two decades of experience, I've only ever worked with two female directors. I did not know what the version of me — the one who would exist behind a camera, calling the shots —would look like. In almost every position in Hollywood — from the director's chair to the writers room to the A.D. department — women are grossly underrepresented. As more allegations of sexual harassment and assault emerge daily, it's becoming increasing apparent to me that the abuse of women leads to the absence of women. Recently, a woman named Kater Gordon told a story publicly about being sexually harassed by Matthew Weiner while working as a writer on Mad Men. Mr. Weiner allegedly told her in his office that he felt he had earned the right to see her naked. She brushed off his advance, and the following season she was fired, even after winning an Emmy for the episode she had co-written with him...

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アンバー・タンブリンのインスタグラム(amberrosetamblyn) - 12月8日 07時16分


I wrote a piece for The Hollywood Reporter in their Women in Hollywood issue. Full link in bio::::::::::::::::: Years ago, I was sitting across the table from a film director who was set to helm the screenplay I had adapted, Paint It Black. We had very strong yet different visions for the movie we hoped to make together, and after many creative discussions, the director told me they didn't feel they were the right director anymore. Because I was. After the director and I parted ways, my producer, Wren Arthur, called me to talk about the idea; I balked, saying I had no real experience. "Don't you, though?" she asked.

Did I? There were very few examples for comparison. I've been an actress since I was 11, and in over two decades of experience, I've only ever worked with two female directors. I did not know what the version of me — the one who would exist behind a camera, calling the shots —would look like. In almost every position in Hollywood — from the director's chair to the writers room to the A.D. department — women are grossly underrepresented.

As more allegations of sexual harassment and assault emerge daily, it's becoming increasing apparent to me that the abuse of women leads to the absence of women. Recently, a woman named Kater Gordon told a story publicly about being sexually harassed by Matthew Weiner while working as a writer on Mad Men. Mr. Weiner allegedly told her in his office that he felt he had earned the right to see her naked. She brushed off his advance, and the following season she was fired, even after winning an Emmy for the episode she had co-written with him...


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