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The Guardian view on film awards: and the winner is…

The Guardian view on film awards: and the winner is…

The Guardian14-02-2025

The Guardian style guide advises writers to use the term 'actor' regardless of the performer's identity: 'avoid actress except when in name of award, eg Oscar for best actress'. As the awards season is upon us, this instruction goes to the heart of a question that has been asked behind the scenes – should we still have separate best actor and actress categories? Or are they exclusionary and outdated? There's no Academy award for best female sound engineer.
Last year, Variety magazine reported that the Academy was considering eliminating the separate awards, following the example of the Grammys in 2012 and other film and TV honours since, but that this was still in early 'exploration'. The arguments in favour are that this would put male and female actors on an equal footing and include non-binary actors. The case against is the danger of fewer or no women at all being nominated: the Brits' decision to combine the best solo artist awards in 2022 was immediately followed by an all-male shortlist.
Like the ceremonies themselves, dazzling parades of beautiful women in lovely dresses, the focus on the acting gongs obscures a less pretty reality elsewhere. It is no small irony that the only film written and directed by a woman that is up for major awards at the Baftas this Sunday and the Oscars next month is Coralie Fargeat's The Substance, a body horror movie satirising Hollywood's treatment of women. Last year, Barbie was nominated for best picture, but not, controversially, its director, Greta Gerwig.
In the Oscars' 96 years, only three women have won best director. No woman has ever won best cinematographer, and only one best visual effects. These statistics are shocking, and partly reflect the underlying problem. Of all the films entered into the best director category at the Baftas this year, fewer than 25% were by women. As the Bafta chair, Sara Putt, said: 'We cannot dictate what is being made… we're at the end of that talent pipeline.'
Film is not the only creative industry wrestling with these issues. This week the longlist for the Women's prize for non-fiction, now in its second year, was announced. Its sister prize for fiction has been dogged by charges of special‑pleading and irrelevance since its inception (as the Orange prize) nearly 30 years ago in response to 1991's all-male Booker prize shortlist. The late AS Byatt refused to allow her novels to be submitted on the grounds that the prize was 'sexist'.
Yet the Women's prize has not only amplified and celebrated books by women, but books about women. Awards not only signal which individuals are valued, they also highlight whose stories are considered most culturally important. As Samantha Morton said in her moving Bafta fellowship award acceptance speech last year, 'Representation matters ... the stories we tell have the power to change peoples' lives.' According to this year's favourites (now Emilia Pérez is out of the running) – Conclave, The Brutalist and A Complete Unknown – these are still by and about men. Oppenheimer swept the Oscars last year.
At a time when women's rights are being eroded across the world, the visibility and recognition of female artists is more vital than ever. Diversity in every sense should be better represented across every category. Everyone wins when talent is fairly recognised, but that will require change not only in awards but across the film industry.

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Fraserburgh Junior Arts Society: The group backed by Judi Dench that 'means so much to so many'
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Fraserburgh Junior Arts Society: The group backed by Judi Dench that 'means so much to so many'

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Watch Me (Whip/Nae Nae) rapper Silentó sentenced to 30 years for killing cousin
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Shameless star made OBE says Prince of Wales joked about her playing Elizabeth I
Shameless star made OBE says Prince of Wales joked about her playing Elizabeth I

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Shameless star made OBE says Prince of Wales joked about her playing Elizabeth I

Shameless star Anne-Marie Duff said she and the Prince of Wales laughed about her previous role playing Elizabeth I as she was formally made an OBE. Ms Duff, 54, played Fiona Gallagher in Channel 4's Shameless TV show and won a best supporting actress Bafta for her role as Grace Williams in Apple TV's series Bad Sisters. The actor also performed as Elizabeth I in the 2005 to 2006 BBC dramatisation of the monarch's life, titled The Virgin Queen. Discussing that role led William to joke 'this should all be old hat for you, or something' during Wednesday's ceremony at Windsor Castle, Ms Duff said. The actor spoke to the PA news agency inside the Berkshire royal residence after being formally made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to drama. Asked if the event had been as expected having played Elizabeth I, she said: '(Windsor Castle) is like a treasure chest, isn't it? Because every piece of every room is swollen with history and art and value, so it's very specific. 'To be in this environment where people do live and do sit down and have their dinner and all of those things – you know, when you're on location, you don't really have that feeling of something like that, but this is someone's home, which is just extraordinary to me.' The Virgin Queen was not filmed at royal residences for security reasons, she said. Ms Duff lives in north London and has a son with her former husband and Shameless co-star James McAvoy. She said she and the Prince of Wales discussed balancing work and parenting and 'how we're all kind of the same'. Her next guaranteed job is not until 2026 and she said she cannot talk about other projects that may pop up before then. 'There's so much nonsense now, you can't even read scripts now without NDAs (non-disclosure agreements)', she said. 'The streamers are like old Hollywood studios, it's like that, it's so bonkers, so you don't get to sort of enjoy the prelude to things with people – you can't say, oh my god, yeah, I'm going to be doing (this). You have to keep everything on the down-low.' She laughed as she said: 'I would love to tell you, Your Royal Highness, but … ' 'There are snipers everywhere, that's what it feels like, seriously, the walls have ears', she added. Ms Duff said a play would be the 'juiciest' next project for her because she prefers the 'communion with people' in theatre, as well as the immediacy and 'being in charge of the chronology'. She said she discussed her preference for the stage with William. She told PA: 'If a light bulb blows, we still go on. It's all of that and the jeopardy of it – when things go wrong, you become so resourceful and having each other's back as a company.' Asked how she felt after being formally made an OBE, Ms Duff said: 'Fabulous, really lucky. You never imagine that – I think especially for people who work in the arts – you never really have a sense of what you do as having a great deal of importance or being a contribution to anything. 'You're just so busy working away. It feels extraordinary to be recognised.'

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