Rose Byrne: 'Sony hack blew open Hollywood sexism scandal'
Australian actress Rose Byrne is convinced the Sony Pictures hacking could pave the way for equality in the movie industry because the leaked emails revealed rampant sexism in Hollywood.
The scandal hit headlines last year (14) when cyber criminals infiltrated the company's database and stole reams of private information, including emails which revealed stars' salary details.
Among the revelations was the gender pay gap on Oscar-nominated
movie American Hustle, with emails suggesting the film's female
stars, Jennifer Lawrence and Amy Adams, were paid significantly
less than the male actors.
Byrne, who has founded an all-female film production company, has
now declared the hacking could actually benefit Hollywood because
it has turned the spotlight on problems facing women in Tinseltown
and prompted a probe by the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU).
She tells Pridesource.com, "The statistics are still so dreadful
for women in film. Now the ACLU is doing an investigation into it
because they're starting to realize it's actually discrimination -
it's not just good ol' fashioned misogyny that everyone's quietly
tolerated for years. The business is sort of the wrong way in the
sense that the statistics are just really dreadful for women in
terms of speaking parts and pay cheques for women. All that stuff
that was leaked through the Internet when Sony was hacked - it all
speaks for itself. So, it is beyond just misogyny. It's legitimate
discrimination based on gender, which is illegal. Any
discrimination is, whether it's sexuality, race or gender."