Eighty-two female stars at the Cannes Film Festival have staged a red-carpet protest against gender inequality. They also called for "a safe workplace" following allegations against producer Harvey Weinstein.
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Hollywood stars including Cate Blanchett, Jane Fonda and Salma Hayek were among those on Saturday who climbed the steps of the Palais des Festivals to support the "climb for women to the top of the industry."
"Women are not a minority in the world, yet the current state of the industry says otherwise," said Blanchett, one of five female members of this year's Cannes jury. "We stand together on these steps today as a symbol of our determination to change and progress."
"The stairs of our industry must be accessible to all," she concluded. "Let's climb."
Why 82? The number of women protesting corresponded with the low number of women-directed films playing at the festival's Palme d'Or competition — in contrast to the 1,645 films directed by men.
Gender balance: Cannes Film Festival director Thierry Fremaux has repeatedly insisted that the festival chooses its films purely based on quality. But he's also signaled that the festival is reanalyzing its procedures and making its selection committees more equal.
Only one female winner: Cannes has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years over the number of female directors selected to compete for its Palme d'Or, considered one of the most esteemed achievements in cinema. Jane Campion is the only female filmmaker to ever win the Palme.
Famous feminists and the struggle for equality
Olympe de Gouges, Sojourner Truth and Judith Butler: A look at women who've fought for equality.
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Olympe de Gouges (1748-1793)
The French revolutionary was a pioneer in the struggle for women's rights. In 1791, Olympe de Gouges wrote a "Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen" in response to the 1789 declaration of human and civil rights, which didn't take women into account. In her text, she wrote that women are born free and are equal to men in all of their rights.
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Sojourner Truth (1797-1883)
Activist Sojourner Truth made a connection between the rights of slaves in the United States and those of women. She campaigned for both the abolition of slavery and women's suffrage. Her speech "And ain't I a woman?" which she held at a women's rights convention in Ohio in 1851, went down in the history books.
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Louise Otto-Peters (1819-1895)
Louise Otto-Peters is considered the founder of the German women's rights movement. In 1843, she became famous for saying, "The participation of women in the interests of the state is not a right, but a duty." Otto-Peters co-founded Germany's first feminist organization, the Allgemeiner Deutscher Frauenverein, in 1865.
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Hedwig Dohm (1831-1919)
In 1874, she wrote "The Scientific Emancipation of Women." Hedwig Dohm called for women's suffrage and unrestricted access to universities, making her a radical pioneer of the German feminist movement. According to her motto "Human rights know no gender," Dohm demanded equality across the board.
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Emily Davison (1872-1913)
British sufragette Emily Davison was arrested eight times. The activist sometimes resorted to violent protests in her campaign for women's rights. She was a member of the Women's Social and Political Union, which was founded in 1903. Its motto was, "Deeds, not words." Ultimately, Davison died a martyr. In an effort to draw attention to her cause during a horse race, she was trampled to death.
Simone de Beauvoir's 1949 work "The Second Sex" is a milestone of feminist literature. In it, she famously wrote, "One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman." Well ahead of her time, she was among the first to assert the thesis that gender is not a biological fact.
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Betty Friedan (1921-2006)
In her work "The Feminine Mystique," Betty Friedan criticized the reduction of women to mothers and housewives. It was published in 1963 and she became an activist in the American feminist movement. In 1966, she and 27 other women founded the National Organization for Women. She would go on to spend her life fighting for gender equality.
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Alice Schwarzer (*1942)
In fall 1975, Alice Schwarzer released her book "The Little Difference and Its Huge Consequences," in which she analyzes sex as a power play between men and women. It became a bestseller, making Schwarzer the best-known and most divisive feminist in Germany. She has been publishing "Emma" since 1977.
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Judith Butler (*1956)
The deconstruction of gender is the central theme of Judith Butler's work "Gender Trouble" from 1990. Her thesis is that both our learned gender and our biological sex are socially construed and our gender identity is a performance. The American philosopher became a pioneer of feminist theory in the 1990s.
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Mozn Hassan (*1979)
Mozn Hassan and her organization Nazra for Feminist Studies have fought for women's rights in Egypt since 2007. During the Arab Spring, Nazra made sure that sexual harassment became a statutory offense. In 2016, the feminist activist Hassan received the Right Livelihood Award — also known as the Alternative Nobel Prize — for her work.
Image: Right Livelihood Award/M. Mohie
Laurie Penny (*1986)
Laurie Penny of Britain is considered one of the most significant feminists of our time. Her works "Meat Market" and "Unspeakable Things" criticize the sexualization and sexual suppression of women and the idea of romantic love. Penny works as a columnist and journalist for "The Guardian," "the Independent," "New Statesman" and others.
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Margarete Stokowski (*1986)
She is also known as the "German Laurie Penny." Margarete Stokowski's debut book "Untenrum frei" ("Free down below") discusses power, mechanisms of sexual suppression, gender roles assigned be society and how small freedoms relate to larger liberties. The "Spiegel" columnist's main thesis is that we can't be free at the top if we're not free down below — and vice versa.
Saturday's protest was held ahead of the premiere of "Girls of the Sun," directed by female French filmmaker Eva Husson. The movie stars Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani who plays a Kurdish female fighter who commands a battalion of entirely female soldiers.
Husson is one of three female filmmakers out of the 21 directors in competition for the Palme d'Or this year. The other two — Nadine Labaki's "Capernaum," and Alice Rohrwacher's "Happy as Lazzaro" — are set to premiere next week.