SARASOTA -- Geena Davis exuded star power and winning charm Friday as she delivered a serious message about improving gender portrayals in media at the Sarasota Yacht Club.
While attendees noshed on a scrumptious salad and sipped wine, the Oscar winner spoke with upmost command.
She joked about her early-career appearance in the movie Earth Girls Are Easy before talking about how the stirring fan feedback she received for her roles in the feminist films Thelma & Louise and A League of Their Own made her reconsider what Hollywood had to offer.
I realized how few roles there were for women, Davis said at the Sarasota Film Festival luncheon. And that colored my decision-making process from then on.
The acclaimed actor proceeded to speak about watching childrens programs with her daughter and noticing the disparity between men (lots) and women (few).
The message it seems were sending is girls and women are less important, she said.
She then detailed the groundbreaking work being done with her Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media and its programming arm, See Jane.
Mark Famiglio, the festivals president, then took the stage to announce a new partnership: The Sarasota Film Festival and the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media have formed a year-round partnership to incorporate media training workshop and filmmaking challenge for middle school- and high school-aged filmmakers into the SFFs educational programming.
We will start with Booker Middle School, Famiglio said.
The Geena Davis institute works with entertainment companies and the next generation of content-creators to increase the number of girls and women in media aimed at children, as well as working to reduce stereotyping of both males and females.
The partnership with the SFF will be See Janes first educational partnership with a film festival.
The Sarasota Film Festival is proud to partner with See Jane to expand the reach of our outreach and educational department, offering even more opportunities to teach filmmaking to students, Famigilio said.
Earlier in the day, attendees were shown the world premiere of the short film Guess Who?
Created by student producers at Boston University in conjunction with See Jane, its the inspiration for the SFF/See Jane student filmmaking workshops.
The short shoots down stereotypes by showing childrens perceptions of a baker and mathematicians identity.
We believe the Sarasota Film Festival and its award-winning outreach and education department are perfect partners for us as we launch this initiative to educate the next generation of filmmakers about gender stereotypes and portrayals of female characters, Davis said in a statement.




