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TRIVIA
QUIZ
Women in Film Questions
The Academy Awards – Men Without
Women!
1) In the 78 year history of the Oscars,
how many women have ever been nominated for Best Director?
2) How many women of color have ever been
nominated for Best Director?
3) Who were the women nominated for Best
Director and for which films?
4) Who was the first African-American female
director nominated for a short-subject Academy Award?
5) How many women have won the award for
Best Director?
6) Of the 40 full-length films nominated
in any category in 2006,
how many were directed by a woman?
7) Of the short films nominated in 2006,
how many were directed
by a woman?
The Status of Women in Hollywood – Where
the Boys Are!
1) Of the 250 top-grossing films released
in 2004, what percentage
were directed by a woman?
2) On those films, what percentage of all
those working as directors, executive producers, producers, writers,
cinematographers, or editors were women?
3) Is that an increase or a decrease since
2001?
4) Of the 250 top-grossing films released
in 2004, what percentage
employed NO women as directors, executive
producers, producers, writers, cinematographers, or editors?
5) What percentage failed to employ any men in
these positions?
6) What percentage of the screenwriters working
on these films were women?
7) What percentage of the cinematographers working
on these films were women?
8) Of all the speaking parts in the 101 top-grossing
G-rated movies released between 1990 and 2004, what percentage are
female?
The Critics – Me and You and Everyone We
Know? Not!
1) Of the members of the New York Film
Critics Circle, what percentage is female?
2) Of the 200 movies in Roger Ebert’s
two books, The Great Movies and The Great Movies II,
how many are directed by women?
3) Of the 139 films on the 2005 Top 10 lists
by 61 major U.S. critics listed on Metacritic.com, how many were
feature films directed by an American woman?
The History of Women in the Film Industry – The
Way We Were
1) Who is credited with directing the first narrative
film? In what year?
2) Between 1912 and 1925, how many of Hollywood’s
films were written by women?
3) Who was the first woman to direct a full-length
feature film?
4) Who was the first woman of African descent
to direct a major Hollywood studio film?
5) Who was Universal
Studios’ highest paid director in 1916?
6) Edith Head's name
appeared in the credits of over 300 films between 1933 and 1982.
What was her role?
7) Give the screen name of the actress whose
real name is Frances Gumm (1922-1969)
8) What woman made her directing debut with
a film that she wrote, produced and starred in as a young woman impersonating
a young man?
9) In what 1930 film
does Marlene Dietrich, dressed in a tuxedo, kiss a woman on the lips?
10) In what movie are these lines sung: “Our
daughters' daughters will adore us / They will sing in grateful chorus
/ Well done, sister suffragettes”
TO SEE THE ANSWERS, GO TO:
www.WomenArts.org/push/TriviaQuizAnswers.htm
Sources & Resources:
The Fund for Women Artists (www.WomenArts.org)
An alliance of artists and audience members dedicated to celebrating
and supporting art that tells the truth about women’s lives. “The
Celluloid Ceiling,” by Martha Lauzen: http://www.womenarts.org/advocacy/
CelluloidCeiling2004byMarthaLauzen.htm
Movies by Women (www.moviesbywomen.com)
A grassroots collective working to increase the awareness of women's
contributions to film and television history. The site includes
information on historical women directors, statistics on women
directors, and Director interviews. “The Women Behind
the Camera in Early Hollywood,” by Cari Beauchamp: http://www.moviesbywomen.com/history.html
Sisters in Cinema (www.sistersincinema.com)
A resource guide for and about African-American women feature filmmakers. Sisters
in Cinema is also a 62-minute documentary offering an overview
of the lives and films of African-American women feature film directors
from the early part of the 20th century to today.
See Jane (www.seejane.com)
“Where the Girls Aren’t,” a study commissioned by this organization
founded by Geena Davis to dramatically increase the percentages of female characters,
and to reduce gender stereotyping, in media made for children ages zero to
11.
Margaret Fulford’s Women in Film
Quizzes: http://probability.ca/mfulford/quizzes.html
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