Women's Work and Working Women: A Longitudinal Study of Women Working in the British Film and Television Industries (1933-1989)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Leeds
Department Name: School of Media & Communication

Abstract

This project assesses the contribution women have made to film/TV production in Britain, during a period of considerable social change for women and substantial institutional change for the industries: 1933-89. Whilst a minority have worked in 'above-the-line' roles (directors, costume designers), thousands have been employed in 'below-the-line' roles as hairdressers, continuity 'girls', production assistants, and negative cutters, yet their history has barely been studied. Much of their work has been undervalued by academic scholarship which has privileged auteur-directors, and its study hampered by scarce archival sources. This research project looks at the historical relations between women & production by exploring women's contribution through ACT/T trade union records and oral history testimony. From 1933-89 film & commercial TV operated as a closed shop and BBC employment was similarly regulated. By tracing women's contribution through union membership this project will provide empirical data about how many women worked in the industries, their roles and their movement between film/TV. This data will be supplemented by oral history interviews with women which explore their working lives. In bringing these two approaches together this project will unlock previously hidden evidence about women's work, and develop new ways of conceptualising and historicising the film/TV industries through the experiences of below-the-line workers. This will have a wider impact on both the study of film/TV and our understanding of the role of women in 20thC creative arts/industries.
This 3.5-year project has 2 key parts. Part 1, based at the Universities of Newcastle & Sunderland, is led by the PI (Dr Melanie Bell) and CI (Dr Vicky Ball) and comprises a Research Associate (RA), a PhD, a major conference and papers, union training workshops, a website, an oral history project, and a monograph. The PhD will use historical union data to survey women in a chosen industry grade (e.g. producer, editor), and use written, oral & visual evidence from films to produce a number of case studies which analyse women's contributions to the field, thus extending our knowledge of women's work. The conference will draw together academics, archivists, TV/film industry personnel, and policy-makers to explore how long-established working practices have shaped the various dimensions of women's employment in the industries. The RA will lead the oral history component, recording interviews with 25 women, prioritising grades where few historical records remain e.g. make-up, wardrobe, continuity. The interview material will be hosted on a project website and used in BECTU union training workshops with current industry practitioners. The final project outcome (yr 3.5) will be a monograph by the PI/CI which analyses gender and production culture in ACT/T's 3 branches (Film Production, Laboratory, TV) and the BBC, assesses women's campaigning activities (ACTT Equality Committee) and provides case studies of women's work in Costume, Make-Up and Scriptwriting. Part 2, sub-contracted to the British Universities Film & Video Council, will produce a database of ACT/T union membership application data under agreement with the film/TV union, now named BECTU. Whilst the project team will work specifically on women's grades & pay, the database will hold membership application data for both women & men (67,000 apps. in total) ensuring its future potential as a major digital resource for other researchers. Published in yr 3 it will be hosted on a contextual website containing case studies & oral history material and maintained by the BUFVC beyond the life of the project. By bringing into clearer focus the historical gendering of working patterns & production cultures the project's findings will benefit academics/students of film/TV/gender/labour history, and provide a body of evidence which industry personnel/policy-makers may draw upon to intervene in current policy/practice.

Planned Impact

The first area of impact comes from the project's partnership with BECTU. The BUFVC project website and its digitised resources (ACT/T membership application data, oral histories interviews) will make a major contribution to the history of women's work in the production of film and television. BECTU will also benefit from the oral history learning resource developed by the project for use in union training sessions and workshops, which will prompt discussion amongst its members about equality and diversity. This output has significant impact potential which will be measured through workshop participant feedback and BECTU-administered questionnaires in subsequent years. The RA will publish a self-reflexive account of methodology, of interest to trainers/oral historians in other subject-specific contexts.

Secondly, the materials housed on the BUFVC website (searchable database, application data, oral histories, case studies, self-reflexive report on database design and research methodology, and PhD self-reflexive diary) will be of use to archivists, users of media archives, industry workers, their representative bodies and the general public, beyond the scope and life-span of this project. The self-reflexive report on research methodology will suggest alternative ways of using the database and digitised application forms. The PhD's self-reflexive diary will provide a toolkit for researchers and students. Both research outputs will benefit researchers across a number of disciplines (see outputs & academic beneficiaries).

Thirdly, findings from the project will be used for advocacy purposes at events organised by industry groups Women in Film & TV (WFTV) & Skillset. They will be used in three main ways:
1. to raise awareness and promote discussion of equality and diversity practice;
2. to promote women's contributions to film and television production;
3. to raise new expectations and point to new career aspirations for girls/young women.

The fourth output designed to engage potential beneficiaries with the research is the project conference (July 2016) which has four panels targeting the industry, archival and academic sectors:
1. The 'Women & Industry' panel will highlight the relevance of our historical study to the current context and women's position therein. The research and findings from our project will be able to historicise/contextualise findings and trends identified in post-1995 government commissioned reports. The conference will be a crucial forum to bring together representatives from government and industry who have a vested interest in equal opportunities; DCMS, Skillset, BFI, Arts Council, BBC, ITV and CH 4, as well as workers themselves and their representative groups (WFTV & BECTU).
2. The 'Women & Work' panel will celebrate and debate women's creative contributions to film/TV, past and present, by inviting a cross-generational panel of women to discuss their work and working practices.
3. The 'Women & the Unions' panel will feature representatives from BECTU's Equality Committee (past and present), their training team, and their Young Persons Forum to speak about the union's relationship to equality and diversity issues, and debate future pathways.
4. The 'Women & the Archives' panel will invite representatives from national/regional film and TV archives, company archives such as Granada and curators, librarians and researchers. The panel will address future pathways to enable the education, research and preservation of materials related to women's film/TV history.
The project's conference will therefore provide a stimulus, in terms of impact, to policy-makers and industry groups, women workers, BECTU, archivists and researchers to debate the key issues relating to women's work in film and television production (both past, present and future) and, via the project website and media publicity, bring the project and the issues it raises to wider public attention.
 
Description the purpose of this award was to investigate the contribution women made to british film and television production between the 1930s and the 1980s. during the course of this investigation we established that, on average, 25% of the unionised workforce were women and that there was significant variation, with some time periods and modes of media production being more hospitable to employing women than others. we conducted extensive oral history interviews with women to establish both their contribution and how they understood their work and professional identities. As women are frequently absent from established, official histories it was important to hear descriptions of work directly from women themselves. they talked about pay, working conditions, work-place cultures, and their professional identities. They described their work processes in detail, particularly important as these are either missing from the historical record or dismissed by official, male-authored histories as low skilled labour. Recording these oral histories and using them with young women in the industries today has been particularly fruitful as it has helped generate debate about the role of women in media production and how they and their work are viewed (especially pertinent in the current political climate). We intend to continue analysing the data and drawing from it in our discussion with young media professionals.
Exploitation Route Materials from the project (oral histories and statistical data) is archived with Learning on Screen (weblink active February 2018 onwards) and we anticipate this generating interest about the FE/HE communities. We also anticipate stakeholders such as the BFI, BECTU union and Women in Film and Television making use of the findings in their campaigns and debates to promote/support gender equality in the media industries. A further sector is culture/heritage and museums with an interest in the histories of cultural production and the role of women therein.
Sectors Creative Economy,Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL http://bufvc.ac.uk/womenswork
 
Description Research findings from the project have been used with non-academic audiences on 4 separate occasions:1.'Trailblazing Women' conference, Greenwich University, June 2017. This conference, organised by a university, was attended by a significant number of film and television practitioners .i.e. women working in the industries as production secretaries, critics, writers etc. Also in attendance were representatives from the British Film Institute, membership organisations such as Raising Films and Women Over Fifty film festival. I shared research findings with attendees and invited responses/chaired discussion/debate. Written responses were collected from participants. Written comments by delegates included: "Often I am self-deprecating in my choices of words and hesitate to call myself a "writer" for fear of not having enough experience/reputation. Hearing about women fighting for titles of "technician" or "artist" or "designer" inspires me to uses terms that clearly indicate that I am a professional and [I] owe it to those women to own it.' (Age 22)". 2. Meetings to discuss findings with Kate Kinninmont, Chair of Women in Film and Media and co-ordinator of UK response to #me too campaign (November 2017). 3. Meeting to discuss findings with Kate Kinninmont, Ann Morrison (BAFTA) and representatives from British Film Institute (Jan. 26, 2018). All are stakeholders with a remit for shaping gender, equality and diversity debates and policy. Dissemination of research findings wasplanned for follow-up event at BFI (scheduled for April 2018) for further dissemination to non-academic audience with impact follow-up but unfortunately this event did no got ahead as planned due to resource constraints experienced by Kate Kinninmont, Chair of Women in Film and Media. 4. Presentation by the PI at an AudioVisual Heritage event at University of Leeds, in 2017 brought the research to an audience of cultural heritage institutions (libraries, museums, galleries and cultural exhibitors). This inspired professionals working in the regional film community (Square Chapel, Halifax; Leeds International Film Festival) who subsequently drew on the research to support their development of new cultural events for a cinema-going public interested in women's film history (April 2019 and November 2019). In November 2019 the project team ran a 'wikithon' workshop at the University of Leeds which drew together scholars and cultural engagement officers from the region to edit existing wikithon web pages relating to women film-makers, with the goal of increasingly the visibility of women's work. The event led to 7,000 new words being added to Wikipedia.
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Creative Economy,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Title Development of new research materials, specifically digitised historical data relating to film and television union applications in the UK (1933-1989); twenty-five new oral history interview recordings. 
Description These are new research materials or resources which are being utilised for the first time in British film and television history. The union applications have generated statistical data which illuminates a longitudinal view of the British film and television workforce, allowing scholars to assess accurately for the first time the historical range and scope of employment in this sector and its gendered pathways. The suite of oral history interviews comprises over one hundred and forty hours of recorded interview material with a range of industry professionals (all women). They reflect in detail the experiences of women as industry professionals, opening up issues of recruitment, sexism, retention, training and promotion; topic areas that are currently being debated in the contemporary workplace. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2016 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Oral history recordings were shared with contemporary industry professionals at a Women's Committee workshop (2016) and have stimulated debate within that cohort who have since worked collectively to develop a mentoring scheme for young women in the media industries. Statistical data was shared at a workshop on women's contribution to British sound cinema, hosted at the British Film Institute in May 2016. The audience comprised of academics and industry sound professionals and the data is helping us to refine our understanding of women's participation in the industry and contribution to the development of sound genre. 
 
Title Learning on Screen (BUFVC): Women's Work in British Film & Television 
Description The database has been developed in collaboration with the British University Film and Video Council (now known as 'Learning on Screen') and will go live at the end of the award. This database is a repository of the quantitative data (union records) from which statistical reports can be generated and qualitative data (oral history interviews, both new and legacy). It also contains 'how to' videos, self-reflexive reports, historical timelines and explanations of the recruitment process and methodology. In order to meet the requirements of the data protection act, and the wishes of interviewees, certain elements of data have been anonymised. This is explained on the resource. Parts of the site are 'open access' and will reach the general public; other parts have federated access, restricted to those with Learning on Screen membership, principally those in higher and further education. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Scholarship within the research team is already being underpinned by this resource (conference papers and journal articles). When the resource goes live at the end of the grant funding period we anticipate its materials will have a notable impact on gender and film and television histories. 
 
Description BECTU Women's Committee (London) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Industry/Business
Results and Impact PI and RA attended and presented at the BECTU Women's Committee, attended by 60 participants from across the UK. BECTU is the media and entertainment union (representing professionals across all media including film, television, radio, theatre). The Women's Committee meet annually to set goals and initiatives around equality and diversity. We gave a formal presentation and ran workshops using oral history interview material gathered from the research project. This material was used as a stimulus for debates around equality and diversity within the media. The Steering Group of the Women's Committee reported that the majority of delegates rated the event 'very successful' in their feedback forms.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description BECTU Women's Committee, Workshop follow-up questionnaire at 6 months 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact A follow-up on-line questionnaire was sent to the 50 delegates who participated in the BECTU Women's Committee conference in 2015 at which the PI and RA delivered a listening workshop on gender, feminism and women's work in the media industries. From those 50 delegates, a survey was sent to 26 who had agreed to be participated for further follow-up. 9 responses were received. This questionnaire asked questions designed to measure longer-term impact, for example had there been any change in thinking or practice on the topic of gender equality & the media industries as a result of the workshop. Half of the respondents reported change with a varying degrees of level and scope. Some reported changes in levels of awareness, others that the workshop had confirmed what they suspected but they felt more empowered to challenge discrimination and galvanised to agitate for change within the industry. Challenging negative recruitment strategies, behaviours, values and stereotypes expressed by work colleagues took place at an individual level and took the form of 'calling someone out' or arguing to get a highly qualified women recruited into their department. Other respondents challenged their energies into greater involvement with the trade union as a vehicle for change. Respondents reported the workshop had had a longer-lasting motivating impact and had been instrumental in them building resilience to tackle discrimination.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Gender Equalities at Work 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Frances C. Galt and Sarah Boston (2021) 'In Conversation with Sarah Boston', Gender Equalities at Work [Podcast]. 29 August.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.genderequalitiesat50.ed.ac.uk/2021/08/29/new-podcast-in-conversation-with-sarah-boston/
 
Description Leeds International Film Festival 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Presentation / introduction to a cinema audience regarding the work of editor Thelma Connell, which generated debate about the 'forgotten' history of women film editors.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Podcast 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Frances C. Galt and So Mayer (2021) 'Interview with Frances Galt to mark publication of Women's Activism Behind the Screens', Raising Films. April.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.raisingfilms.com/frances-galt-interview-womens-activism/
 
Description Trade Unions and Gender Inequality in the British Film and Television Industries 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Frances C. Galt and Dave O'Brien (2021) 'Women's Activism Behind the Screens: Trade Unions and Gender Inequality in the British Film and Television Industries', New Books Network [Podcast]. 5 March. Available via: https://newbooksnetwork.com/womens-activism-behind-the-screens
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
 
Description Trailblazing Women, conference comprised of academics and industry practitoners (film and tv makers) held at Univeristy of Greenwich, June 2017 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This was an event organised by the University of Greenwich to bring together academics, students and industry practitioners (tv & film makers), alongside representatives from British film institute and others. It provided a platform to disseminate research findings and shape debate and discussion about the role of women in media production, past, present and future, women from different generations and professional roles attended and a questionnaire was distributed to collect views on how the event had shaped their thinking and might change their practice.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Third sector organisations
Results and Impact 20 participants took part in an edit-a-thon which amended existing pages about women film-makers on Wikipedia with the goal to enhance knowledge about those women and make their presence more visible on the site. The women played a central role in making British cinema but their contribution and presence has been under-reported. the edit-a-thon workshop corrected this lack of visibility.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description Women and Sound workshop, British Film Institute, May 2016 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Sixty participants attended a Women and Sound in the British film & television event at the BFI Southbank. Co-Organised by the Women's Film and TV History Network and the BFI, the project's PI Dr Melanie Bell presented findings from the project to an audience of industry practitioners (sound professionals), academics and the general public.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Women's Work in the British Film and TV Industries', BFI Education Conference, BFI Southbank, 3rd July 2015. 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation and discussion by Dr Vicky Ball (CI) on the topic of women's media histories to FE teachers at the BFI Education Conference, BFI Southbank, which showcases new/emerging research and shares ideas about working with students in film and media studies.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description podcast 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Frances C. Galt (2021) 'Women's Activism Behind the Screens', Transforming Society. 12 March.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.transformingsociety.co.uk/2021/03/12/womens-activism-behind-the-screens/