fbpx

A new generation of Jewish actresses ups the ante for Jewish women

[additional-authors]
August 11, 2011

I guess I should blame my college concentration in women’s studies for focusing my attention on the social, economic and political realities facing women. It sure beat math class. Though once you begin to see various narratives through a particular lens, you can’t go back, you can only add.

My attention to female narrative is thus automatic and ingrained, not only because I observe women but because I am one, and it’s only natural that it should inform the way I see the world. This affects people I meet, books I read, and among countless other things, the way I watch movies.

I can’t help but notice issues of representation in Hollywood, especially where they pertain to women, because of the immense influence Hollywood has on cultural ideas and attitudes.

The subject of this week’s Jewish Journal cover story is an attempt to investigate and understand how a new generation of Jewish actresses is subverting stereotypical notions of Jewish women.

Anyone who is thinking, “Of course she’d write nice things about Jewish girls, she is one!”—well yes (except in class they’d say, ‘You’re not a girl! You’re a WOMYN!”) but I don’t write Hollywood history, I only repeat it.

The year is 1950. The setting is a dimly lit movie studio backlot. It’s the middle of the night, and an attractive young woman named Betty Schaefer is explaining to her screenwriting partner why she became a writer instead of what she really wanted to be — an actress. The movie is “Sunset Boulevard.”

“I come from a picture family,” Schaefer (Nancy Olson) tells Joe Gillis (William Holden). “Naturally, they took it for granted I was to become a great star.  So I had 10 years of dramatic lessons, diction, dancing. Then the studio made a test.  Well, they didn’t like my nose — it slanted this way a little. I went to a doctor and had it fixed.  They made more tests, and they were crazy about my nose — only they didn’t like my acting.”

Though it’s never overtly stated, the obvious implication is that Betty Schaefer is Jewish. If you’ve ever wanted to understand the ambivalence Hollywood has felt toward Jewish women, there it is in glorious black and white.

Read the rest here

 

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

Print Issue: The Year Everything Changed | March 13, 2026

Crazy as it might sound, it all started with the Dodgers, and how they won back-to- back World Series in 2024 and 2025. That year, with those two championships on either end, is the exact same year l became a practicing Jew. And I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

Rabbi Jerry Cutler, 91

In 1973, he founded Synagogue for the Performing Arts, drawing the likes of Walter Matthau, Ed Asner and Joan Rivers.

Pies for Pi Day

March 14, or 3/14 is Pi Day in celebration of the mathematical constant, 3.14159 etc. Any excuse to enjoy a classic or creative pie.

It Didn’t Start with Auschwitz

Jews today do have a voice. For the moment. But we have not used it where it counts – in the mainstream media, the halls of power, on campuses, on school boards, in the public square.

Regime Humiliation: No, You Won’t Destroy Israel

After years of terrorizing Israelis with existential threats, the Islamic regime is now worried about its own existence. In a region where the projection of power is everything, that is humiliation.

The War in Iran and the Long-Term Relationship with America

There is a golden opportunity to expose the intellectual bankruptcy of antisemitism based on current identity politics discourse, and to credibly argue that the current struggle is a global confrontation between the forces of terror and oppression and the Free World.

Ladino Shabbat at Sinai

On a recent Shabbat, Sinai celebrated the Ladino tradition and invited me to tell my story.

A Short Fuse

At 73, I know I am on a slippery slope that’s getting slipperier.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.