News tratta da Mic.com
Fans of the hit '90s TV show The
X-Files, who rejoiced after learning a revival was
in the works, are likely excitedly gearing up for the reboot's Sunday premiere.
But their enthusiasm might be dampened by news of the sexist treatment star Gillian
Anderson faced on set, the
details of which she explained to the Daily Beast on
Friday.
Although the award-winning actress was ultimately paid
the same as her co-star, she disclosed to the Hollywood Reporter that she was initially offered half. The lack of media buzz about this wage gap, she told the Daily Beast, was "shocking
to me, given all the work that I had done in the past to get us to be paid
fairly."
Anderson — who wasn't paid the same amount as her co-star, David
Duchovny, until a few years into the series — fought for equal treatment years ago, according to the Daily Beast. To
add insult to injury, the actress was also initially required to "stand a
few feet behind" Duchovny and never "step side-by-side with him," according to the same report.
"I can only imagine that at the beginning,
they wanted me to be the sidekick," she told the Daily Beast. "I don't know how long it lasted or
if it changed because I eventually said, 'Fuck no! No!' ... But I imagine it
had more to do with my intolerance and spunk than it being an allowance that
was made."
Anderson is hardly the first actress to speak
out about the entertainment industry's inequitable treatment of actresses. Patricia Arquette, Reese Witherspoon and others have
spoken
out about Hollywood's wage gap, and the numbers back them up.
While the 10 highest-paid movie actors made $431 million in 2015, the 10
highest-paid actresses made about half, at $218 million, Variety reported
in November.
The problem extends well beyond Hollywood too.
In 2014 full-time female workers in the United States made 79 cents for every
dollar their male counterparts made — a gap that is significantly worse for
women of color and mothers, according to the American Association of University Women. A 2015 study revealed that
at the current pace, this gap likely won't close until 2058.
That Anderson was ultimately paid
the same as her male counterpart underscores the importance of other actresses speaking
out about the issue until equality is the norm.
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