Sarah Jessica Parker: 'Sexism is still prevalent in the fashion industry'
Actress and style icon Sarah Jessica Parker is hesitant about taking on further jobs in fashion after a recent bad experience made her realize sexism is still a prevalent problem across the industry.
The Sex and the City star is refusing to reveal which company she's referring to in the Marie Claire article, but all signs point to her brief stint at design house Halston, where she had been hired as the Chief Creative Officer of the lower-priced Halston Heritage label in January, 2010.
She quietly parted ways with the firm in July, 2011 and now appears
to have shed some light on her reasons for quitting, suggesting she
was brushed aside by more powerful male executives who were only
interested in using her fame to front the brand.
Parker tells the magazine, "I was brought in to help run a fashion
company for about a year (although I don't want to name names). I
was shocked to experience an old-fashioned attitude about women and
business: women had titles but were treated as figureheads. So it
wasn't one negotiation, but an ongoing negotiation to make it clear
that my voice was just as important, and that if they wanted me to
be an active participant, it had to be an open conversation."
The actress admits she struggled in silence, apart from seeking
some advice from her representatives: "I called my lawyer and agent
on occasion. But I'm not a little girl; I can't call Mummy and
Daddy all the time. If I take on a responsibility, I want to handle
it with the authority given to me."
However, Parker insists the experience has taught her well for any
future endeavours.
She says, "I would've been stronger. At first you say, 'This must
be some kind of dysfunctional workplace I can whip into shape.' But
cultures are very hard to undo. I probably would've said, 'This is
what I've witnessed and this is what I know we need to fix. If it
can't be fixed, we should all shake hands and go our separate
ways.'"