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Nobody's Girl Friday book cover
Nobody's Girl Friday
The Women Who Ran Hollywood
2018
First Published
3.65
Average Rating
328
Number of Pages

Looking back on her career in 1977, Bette Davis remembered with pride, "Women owned Hollywood for twenty years." She had a point. Between 1930 and 1950, over 40% of film industry employees were women, 25% of all screenwriters were female, one woman ran MGM behind the scenes, over a dozen women worked as producers, a woman headed the Screen Writers Guild three times, and press claimed Hollywood was a generation or two ahead of the rest of the country in terms of gender equality and employment. The first comprehensive history of Hollywood's high-flying career women during the studio era, Nobody's Girl Friday covers the impact of the executives, producers, editors, writers, agents, designers, directors, and actresses who shaped Hollywood film production and style, led their unions, climbed to the top during the war, and fought the blacklist. Based on a decade of archival research, author J.E. Smyth uncovers a formidable generation working within the American film industry and brings their voices back into the history of Hollywood. Their achievements, struggles, and perspectives fundamentally challenge popular ideas about director-based auteurism, male dominance, and female disempowerment in the years between First and Second Wave Feminism. Nobody's Girl Friday is a revisionist history, but it's also a deeply personal, collective account of hundreds of working women, the studios they worked for, and the films they helped to make. For many years, historians and critics have insisted that both American feminism and the power of women in Hollywood declined and virtually disappeared from the 1920s through the 1960s. But Smyth vindicates Bette Davis' claim. The story of the women who called the shots in studio-era Hollywood has never fully been told-until now.

Avg Rating
3.65
Number of Ratings
69
5 STARS
16%
4 STARS
45%
3 STARS
29%
2 STARS
9%
1 STARS
1%
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Author

J.E. Smyth
Author · 2 books

J. E. Smyth is a film critic and historian. She was born in New England and was educated at Wellesley College and Yale University. Smyth has written and edited several books about Hollywood, including a new edition of Jane Allen’s novel, I Lost My Girlish Laughter (Random House, 2019) and Nobody’s Girl Friday (Oxford University Press, 2018), a history of the many high-powered women who worked in the golden age of the Hollywood studio system (1924-1954). In 2021, she was named an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences film scholar for her latest project, a biography of Screen Writers Guild president, labor leader, and feminist, Mary C. McCall Jr.

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