Lena Dunham’s email newsletter Lenny featured an essay by Jennifer Lawrence this week, and it’s getting a lot of people talking. The essay is specifically about the gender pay gap in Hollywood as Lawrence, who is about as A-List as they come, wonders why she makes so much less than her male counterparts.
In the essay, Lawrence admits that she usually doesn’t like to jump into conversations that “feel like they’re ‘tending,'” but decided to weigh in on this issue because “with a lot of talk comes change,” and she wanted to be “honest and open”. Here’s an excerpt from the piece:
Itās hard for me to speak about my experience as a working woman because I can safely say my problems arenāt exactly relatable. When the Sony hack happened and I found out how much less I was being paid than the lucky people with dicks, I didnāt get mad at Sony. I got mad at myself. I failed as a negotiator because I gave up early. I didnāt want to keep fighting over millions of dollars that, frankly, due to two franchises, I donāt need. (I told you it wasnāt relatable, donāt hate me).
But if Iām honest with myself, I would be lying if I didnāt say there was an element of wanting to be liked that influenced my decision to close the deal without a real fight. I didnāt want to seem ādifficultā or āspoiled.ā At the time, that seemed like a fine idea, until I saw the payroll on the Internet and realized every man I was working with definitely didnāt worry about being ādifficultā or āspoiled.ā This could be a young-person thing. It could be a personality thing. Iām sure itās both. But this is an element of my personality that Iāve been working against for years, and based on the statistics, I donāt think Iām the only woman with this issue. Are we socially conditioned to behave this way? Weāve only been able to vote for what, 90 years? Iām seriously asking…
The academy award-winning actress is winning praise from her peers including Emma Watson (herself an activist for gender equality), Jessica Chastain, and Mia Wasikowska.
O Jennifer Lawrence I love you so. X
— Emma Watson (@EmWatson) October 13, 2015
At the premiere of her new movie Crimson Peak, Chastain commented on Lawrence’s essay to say (as reported by Variety), “Iām proud of her. Sometimes when youāre doing well, youāre afraid to say somethingās wrong because then thereās going to be a bunch of people out there going āOK, well, youāre a big old movie star.ā But it doesnāt matter. Thereās no excuse. Thereās no reason why she should be doing a film with other actors and get paid less than her male co-stars. Itās completely unfair. Itās not right. Itās been happening for years and years and years. I think itās brave to talk about it. I think everyone should talk about it.ā
Wasikowska is quoted as saying, “Itās about time that gap was closed and itās still quite surprising that itās still an issue.”
Lena Dunham called Lawrence’s essay “brave” and “beautiful” in a post on Instagram, declaring the issue of her newsletter to be her favorite yet.
It’s definitely a situation that needs to be exposed more greatly, and the fact that huge stars like these are shining a light on it will only create more awareness.