Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Entertainment

Women make up less than 20 per cent of directors getting work in Canada: report

When it comes to both feature films and television done in Canada, men are involved with directing at least 84 per cent of them, if not more, according to a report on gender inequality amongst Canadian directors.

40-page study points to significant gender discrepancy when it comes to Canadian women behind the lens

Irish director Aisling Walsh (left) with Sally Hawkins on the set of the Canadian co-production Maudie, filmed in Newfoundland. (Mongrel Media)

When it comes to feature films and television programsshot in Canada,men are involved with directing at least 84 per cent of the available work, if not more, according to a report on gender inequality amongstCanadian directors.

"Something is very, very wrong with this picture," Amanda Coles, the author of the report and a Canadian scholar in cultural management, told CBC News in a phone interview from Australia.

Coles, a department headat the University of Melbourne,prepared the 40-pagereport for the group Canadian Unions for Equality on Screen. She spoke to 18 men and women directors in Canada.

When a female director succeeds, it is a happy accident.-Amanda Coles, in herreport on women directors prepared for CUES

She found that in cases when women are behind the lens, the pressure to succeedis much higher.

"When male directors under-perform either on set or in the box office, their failures are individualized," the report states."The converse is true for female directors. When a female director succeeds, it is a happy accident. A poor performance for female directors is generalized and gendered."

The conclusions might not surprise a lot of people, but they addto a growing pile of documentation ongender imbalance in the entertainment industry.

A recent report done by researchers at theUniversity of Southern California showed how unequalrepresentation is for women and minorities on screen in Hollywood, with little change on the horizon.

American productions shot in Canada that used a Canadian director were included in Coles' report.

Out of a select seven major U.S. TV shows shot in Canada between 2014 and 2015, three, includingHannibalandThe Strain,didn't hire any female directors. The other four shows, includingHemlock Groveand12 Monkeys,usedone.

Researcher Amanda Coles noted how few women directors have been used for television shows shot in Canada between 2014-15. (Canadian Unions for Equality on Screen)

Women directorsget caught in a "hideous loop," Coles says,whereby they have no experience so they're considered a risk. But because they're considered a risk, they can't get experience.

"It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy."

The report recommends that gender equality become a more firm policy for public institutions,a funding incentive,and the industry should track progress to maintain an eye on key metrics.

She says if you compare current numbers toprevious decades,"the needle hasn't moved substantially at all." Yet studies have shown that more diversity and gender equality on projects actually leads to higher profits.

"We have a lot of data.We don't have to argue that there's a problem anymore. We know that there's a problem. We know that it's,in fact, a global problem. The question we need to seriously address iswhy."

With files from the Associated Press