Hollywood star Naomi Watts just earned strong reviews for leading the English remake of ‘Goodnight Mommy’, was told her career in acting would end at 40.
This month, she’s headlining Ryan Murphy’s latest Netflix thriller, ‘The Watcher’. She’ll also be reuniting with the mega-producer to play Babe Paley in the Capote-centric second season of ‘Feud’, reports Variety.
All of this is to say that Watts’ acting career is thriving, which is not what she was told by an unnamed Hollywood figure after her US breakthrough in David Lynch’s ‘Mulholland Drive’. Naomi Watts was 33 at the time, which many in Hollywood viewed as old.
“I was told, ‘You better get a lot done because it’s all over at 40 when you become unf***able.” And I’m like, ‘What? What does that mean exactly?’” Naomi Watts recently told Entertainment Weekly.
“Then you think about it, and you go, ‘Oh, right. When you are no longer reproductive, when those organs are no longer functioning, you are not s*xy, so, therefore, you are not hirable.’ That just made me so mad.”
Talking about what Hollywood can do better to make room for women after a certain age, Naomi Watts replied: “It’s such an awkward conversation because, from day one, we begin our ageing process. It’s something we just all have to get comfortable with and women are asked to do it more than men.”
“We don’t talk about a man ageing… We don’t talk about his grey hair. In fact, if we do, it’s like, ‘Oh, he gets more handsome, more desirable, more powerful.’ And why is he powerful? Because he’s accumulated experiences.”
“Well, it should be the same for women. We’ve got important and powerful experiences as well at this age that we should feel proud of.”
Charlize Theron recently made headlines for sharing a “belittling” experience from earlier in her career when an unnamed male director made repeated attempts to make her look more “f***able” in their film.
“Having absolutely no control over what you’re wearing is a big one that really f***ing annoyed me for years,” Theron said.
“Having some guy make you have a fitting almost in front of them, stuff like that, it’s really belittling. When I started, there was no conversation around it. It was like, ‘This is what you’re wearing.’”
Charlize Theron continued: “I remember one movie in particular, this male director who just kept bringing me in, fitting after fitting after fitting and it was just so obvious that it was to do with my s*xuality and how f***able they could make me in the movie. And when I started out, that was just kind of the norm.”
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