Showing posts with label Allison Janney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allison Janney. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2016

Hollywood looks at women ...




Jennifer Aniston's first big-screen role was an uncredited role in Mac and Me in 1988.



Aniston essay inspires actresses to address sexist standards



By SANDY COHEN,
AP Entertainment Writer

July 29, 2016



LOS ANGELES (AP) — When one of Hollywood's most objectified women talks about tabloid culture, people listen. But while actresses are cheering Jennifer Aniston's recent essay connecting the media's obsession with her looks to the overall objectification of women, most are resigned that reality will be slow to catch up with the conversation.
 
"Entrenched ways take a while to change," said Marisa Tomei, "but having the conversations and opening it up, objecting to it or seeing different points of view about it is really helpful."



Allison Janney reading the Washington Post !!!!
born 1959


"I applaud Jennifer," said actress Allison Janney. "I hate that she had to do it, but I think she just had enough."
 
Aniston wrote in her Huffington Post essay earlier this month that constant tabloid speculation over whether she's pregnant contributes to sexist cultural standards that equate a woman's worth with her appearance and maternal status.

"We use celebrity 'news' to perpetuate this dehumanizing view of females," Aniston wrote.
 
"More scrutiny has always been leveled at women, no matter the context," said Ella Ceron, digital entertainment editor for Teen Vogue magazine. "Women are held to different standards than men, and are taught from a young age to value their looks and their grooming and their weight very seriously."
 
While tabloids have long seen women through an appearance-focused lens, other recent press coverage unduly aimed at actresses' looks has inspired vocal criticism online. A June article in Variety in which its film critic maligns Renee Zellweger's face based on her appearance in a trailer for "Bridget Jones's Baby" inspired an impassioned response from actress Rose McGowan, who called the piece "vile, damaging, stupid and cruel." Variety has declined comment.
 
Zellweger's face was the subject of such widespread scrutiny and speculation in 2014 that the actress released a statement suggesting that she looks different because she had gotten older during her time away from the entertainment industry.
 
Vanity Fair readers from Los Angeles to Australia blasted the magazine's July cover story that opens by describing "Suicide Squad" star Margot Robbie as "sexy and composed even while naked." Writer Roxane Gay and "Portlandia" creator Carrie Brownstein were among those decrying the article as sexist on social media. Vanity Fair did not respond to a request for comment.
 
 
Melissa Leo on red carpet of 2013 Critics Choice Awards !!!!
 
 
"We've been subjected to this for years, and now with the influx of social media, we have spaces to discuss and vent our frustration," Ceron said. "What's more, people are finally listening to us."
 
Other actresses have been speaking out against sexist beauty standards for years. Barbra Streisand says it's "backward" for our culture to consider actresses in their 40s as somehow "too old."
 
"It's not a European way of looking at, like, movie stars who look like real people," Streisand said.
 
"They have flaws, you know."
 
Jamie Lee Curtis recalled a magazine photo shoot more than 15 years ago where she insisted on being photographed before the hair and makeup wizards worked their magic.
 
"It was my way of making my statement back in the day," Curtis said. "And now Jennifer's written what she wrote ... It's an important conversation."
 
Filmmaker and activist Jennifer Siebel Newsom, who studies gender representation in media, has been working to shift attention from actresses' appearances to their accomplishments through the Representation Project's #AskHerMore campaign. Created in 2014, the effort encourages red carpet reporters to interview actresses about more than their outfits. Reese Witherspoon and Shonda Rhimes are supporters.
 
Change has to come from all genders and sides, Newsom said.
 
"It's too much for one person to take on her own," she said. "So while I applaud these individual actresses writing pieces and speaking out, we have to come together and say enough is enough."
Being beautiful might be considered part of any celebrity's job, male or female. So is it fair for an entertainer to use her image to promote her work on an album or magazine cover, then balk at media scrutiny of her appearance?
 
"The thing is, a man can be attractive without it being his entire selling point," said Ceron of Teen Vogue.
 
Actress Abigail Breslin says consumers have a significant role to play. Tabloids may have influenced popular perceptions of women's looks, but readers don't have to remain complicit.
 
"It just takes people not buying it anymore — not buying magazines that are circling imperfections on the cover," Breslin said. "It's become culturally normal to be like, 'Oh my God, look at this actress, she has bad calves.' That's not normal."
 
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Associated Press writers Lauri Neff in New York, Nicole Evatt in Los Angeles and Ryan Pearson in San Diego contributed to this report.
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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy




Jane Fonda young in a man's shirt !!!!




Jane Seymour, actress as Bond Girl in Live & Let Die (1977)


 

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Friday, April 18, 2014

A Word to Clarify


Simon G 'Summer Soiree' at The Palazzo Resort and Casino Allison Janney photo
"The exquisite is much like the savoring of juices oozing from the first bite into a peach plucked outdoors on a farm, from a garden. It is delightful, and in the sunlight the bite, the taste, the way the juices drip down the chin sparks a playfulness a child would hold onto, or try to hold onto if joy was a collection of bubbles blown by another child making bubbles for everybody! Exquisite is not a word worn out by usage because the concept of an exquisite beauty and the exquisite nature of a woman is far removed from the daily crackle of gossiping and spiteful women too crude in their core to be anything more than good looking! Exquisite and graceful and kind loving women are developed. They cannot pose and pretend to be this way. They become the best of the elements within them, and the words that compose what is beautiful to be around, learn from and aspire to lives within them as a vibrant source of light!" - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories (Dawn Wolf) 10.25.13

photo: Allison Janney, actress 


actress Anika Noni Rose
actress Bai Ling standing in an orange dress and heels




Thursday, February 13, 2014

Girl Power


Actress Allison Janney appeared on the Arsenio Hall show last night. Well, it was a repeat. The actual show date was September 27th I remember. I didn't know she was tall. She had to be graceful, I assumed, because of the way she plays her roles. She is known for her role in West Wing. I didn't watch that show. I've seen and been captivated by other roles she portrayed; chief of which was the role she played in the movie THE HELP.

Being captivating and captivating as a woman is a comforting feeling from a man's perspective. Would that more women of such breeding, who enjoy themselves, and what they do so purely, and playfully be a part of a systematic approach to training young girls, and women above and beyond the rude, and crude examples of womanhood of the popular fare.

- Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories
10.24.13


actress Allison Janney at the 58th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles on August 27, 2006



Thursday, October 31, 2013

People work


World premiere of 'The Help', held at the Samuel Goldwin Theater in The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Allison Janney photo
actress Allison Janney at premiere of THE HELP. Anyone who has seen the movie will catch the significance of the symbolism of this photograph.
Sept. 8, 2011
Galleries: Allison JanneyNicki Minaj 
Gloria EstefanStacy Keibler
2011 Billboard Music Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena - Arrivals Nicki Minaj photo
Nikki Minaj by Nikki Nelson
22.5.11
2011 Billboard Music Awards at MGM Grand Garden Arena - Arrivals


"The only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work, and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet, keep looking and don't settle. As with all matters of the heart you'll know when you find it. And like any great relationship it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking, don't settle.

Steve Jobs, co-founder Apple Inc.
(1955 - 2011)




Wednesday, June 19, 2013

BUSINESS WOMEN'S STORIES: Rani Zakhem

Fashion designer Rani Zakhem founded her vision of women's fashion into a company in 2009.



What a powerful force from within the winds comes out of a person strong enough to push their dreams into the light of practical tangibility!







On February 25th of this year in Los Angles this actress, Allison Janney, from the movie,
THE HELP, appeared in a red silk crepe cocktail dress with chiffon made by
designer Rani Zakhem, on the red carpet. I didn't know she had such pretty legs until this
photo. - Gregory E. Woods, Keeper of Stories