Director Sara Gavron said, “Working (class) women often are the vanguard of change, and they’re often not recognized for that.”
Mary Pickford as “Tess of the Storm Country” out for a walk. Notice the body language, of swinging her arms wide commanding lots of space. |
Another woman not recognized by history is Mary Pickford, the most famous woman in the world at the time the Suffragettes were breaking and burning things.
Maud and the other Suffragettes would have been very familiar with Mary Pickford and her films, where she broke female stereotypes.
On screen, Pickford’s characters fought, choked, kicked, hit, bit, and broke chairs over the heads of men about twice her size — and won. I wonder who inspired who? Did the Suffragettes inspire Mary Pickford, or did she inspire them? Or was it that women’s reality was actually portrayed in the movies?
Like Maud in “Suffragette,” Mary Pickford starting working at the age of seven. She was born in 1892 into a working class family.
By the age of twelve Pickford financially supported her mother and younger siblings as a traveling stage actor.
At the age of fifteen she started working in the movies and went on to start her own studio — United Artists, together with three friends. She starred in hundreds of movies, which almost all were the top grossing movies of the era.
The roles Pickford chose to play were of working class women, since that was her reality. Most of her audience were working class, like Maud in “Suffragette.”
But today’s reality is very different. Women and our stories have been erased, marginalized and ignored in movie-making.
In an interview with Sarah Gavron, the director of “Suffragette,” Women-in-Film PDX and Portland Oregon Women’s Film Festival founder Tara Johnson-Medinger stated,
I think you’ve created the quintessential
film that women in film are striving toward: to have a strong ensemble
of women cast, incredible actors, along with such a strong female crew,
the writer, producers, yourself…
Director Sarah Gavron responded,
I have to say, it’s very rare, sadly. The
statistics are bleak. There’s so few films directed by women and so few
films with female protagonists. . . . We’re half the population and we
want to see our stories reflected. We buy over half of cinema tickets
that sell these stories. Let’s get them made by women and refracted
through the lens of women.
That’s what Mary Pickford was
doing while the Suffragettes were agitating for women’s right to vote —
she was making movies with female protagonists and thousands and
millions of people were watching them.
But like Disney reducing the 50 year struggle of the Suffragettes into the single character of Mary Poppins flying around with her umbrella, (male) film historians have similarly marginalized, ignored and erased from history the screenwriter, movie-mogul, and first movie star, Mary Pickford. They reduced her to only her most insipid of movies–Pollyanna and Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm.
Male film historians ignored Mary Pickford’s hundreds of other movies, especially her favorite character, “Tess of the Storm Country” (1914 and 1922).
Mary Pickford in “Tess of the Storm Country” tackles a bad guy. |
Mary Pickford in “Tess of the Storm Country” chokes a bad guy. |
In “Tess of the Storm Country” Mary Pickford, just five-feet tall, dives from a cliff into a fast-flowing river to save a drowning woman.
She free solo climbs barefoot up a “chimney” of a rock wall, while wearing a dress, to visit her falsely-imprisoned father through his jail cell window.
Mary Pickford in “Tess of the Storm Country” usurps the role of Priest and dips her hand in the font of Holy Water. |
In the movies of Mary Pickford, Suffragettes could see powerful female role models on screen while they took to the streets. In the news they could read how Pickford negotiated her contracts to have complete creative control and the highest salary ever.
Mary Pickford and the Suffragettes demanded their rights and got them.
When will we see equal representation of women protagonists in films made by women?
According to a study done by the University of Southern California, Sundance Institute, and Women in Film, we are over 50% of the population yet we direct only 5% of the top grossing movies, because of the male-controlled economic power structure of Hollywood.
The study also noted,
…Female producers and directors affect
the prevalence of girls and women on screen, they also impact the very
nature of a story, or the way in which a story is told. Examining more
than 900 motion pictures, one study found that violence, guns/weapons,
and blood/gore were less likely to be depicted when women were directing
or producing, and thought-provoking topics were more likely to appear.
Thanks to the Suffragettes, yes, we have the vote. But our voice continues to be silenced. The boys still tell most of the stories, whether it is on the big screen or in the White House.
One exception is Bolivia, where women hold 50% of the seats in parliament. That story, too, has been ignored or marginalized in the U.S. by the male-dominated media.
Sara Gavron’s movie “Suffragette” is a huge step in the right direction.
Support women — go see “Suffragette.”
First published as "Film Legend Mary Pickford and Sara Gavron's 'Suffragette'" on BlogCritics.org.
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