Cate Blanchett, the double Oscar-winning actress leading a Hollywood campaign to tackle sexual harassment in the workplace, will head the jury at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, organisers said on Thursday Jan 04,2018
Australian Cate Blanchett who helped launch the “Time’s Up”
initiative this week following a string of sexual assault accusations
against prominent men in the film industry, will become the 12th woman to lead the prestigious panel at Cannes, which kicks off on May08,2018
“We’re
very pleased to welcome a rare and unique artist with talent and
conviction,” Cannes president Pierre Lescure and delegate general
Thierry Fremaux said in a joint statement.
“Our conversations this autumn convince us she will be a committed president, and a passionate and generous spectator.”
The
choice of Cate Blanchett, who was named best actress at the 2014 Academy
Awards for her role in Woody Allen’s “Blue Jasmine”, will be seen as
politically charged after a year in which the sexual harassment scandal
surrounding Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein sparked a deluge of
allegations against powerful men in entertainment, politics and the
media.
Cate Blanchett was one of the first women
to speak out against Weinstein, who faces claims of a string of sexual
assaults and rapes from more than one hundred accusers.
Weinstein has denied some of the accusations.
“Any
male who’s in a position of authority or power, you know, whether he be
a film producer or the president of the United States who thinks it’s
his prerogative to sexually intimidate or abuse women that they come
into contact with, whether in the workplace or otherwise, they need to
be held to account,” Blanchett said during the September premier of her
latest picture, “Thor: Ragnarok”.
Cate Blanchett was one of over 300 top women in Hollywood, joining the likes of Meryl
Streep and Jennifer Lawrence, to unveil the “Time’s Up” initiative on
Monday to tackle the pervasive culture of sexual harassment at work.
It urges companies, government agencies and even the US federal court system to re-examine harassment policies.
Cate Blanchett won the Oscar for best supporting actress in 2005 for her portrayal of
Katherine Hepburn in Martin Scorsese’s “The Aviator” and won Venice’s
best actress award in 2007 for her androgynous depiction of Bob Dylan in
the biopic “I’m Not There”.
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