Bryce Dallas Howard: Hollywood's attitude to women 'antiquated'

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Bryce Dallas HowardImage source, Getty Images
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Bryce Dallas Howard said she hoped ageism was not inevitable during her career

Hollywood's ageist attitude to actresses is "antiquated, backward and discriminatory", Jurassic World star Bryce Dallas Howard has said.

She was speaking after Maggie Gyllenhaal revealed she had been told she was "too old", external at the age of 37 to play the lover of a 55-year-old man.

"It's up to all of us to be vocal about it, speak out and work together towards solutions," Howard, 34, told the BBC.

She added she had not experienced discrimination in the industry herself.

"I haven't yet experienced ageism - not that it's inevitable, but I hope [the problem] shifts and shifts quickly," she said.

"Like any business there are things that work so well and are incredibly functional and very inspiring. And then there are... elements to this that are antiquated and backward and discriminatory.

"Kudos to Maggie for speaking out because we need to end that - [her experience] is absolutely absurd."

Image source, Universal
Image caption,

The actress will next be seen on screen in Jurassic World, opposite Chris Pratt

Howard, the daughter of director Ron Howard, has generally appeared opposite male leads in her own age bracket.

She previously starred in 50/50, alongside 34-year-old Joseph Gordon-Levitt; and 2009's Terminator Salvation opposite Christian Bale, who is 41.

Her other roles include Oscar-nominated drama The Help and franchise films Spider-Man and Twilight.

The actress will next be seen in the Jurassic Park sequel - opposite 35-year-old Chris Pratt - due in cinemas next week.

The issue of ageism against women in Hollywood has been the subject of numerous studies in the past few years.

A 2013 study by Vulture looked at 10 A-list Hollywood stars - including Tom Cruise, Liam Neeson, Harrison Ford and George Clooney - and plotted the age gaps of their notable love interests, external over the course of their career.

It concluded while male stars were allowed to age into their 40s, 50s and 60s, female actresses remained generally under 40.

Media and technology website Vocative also analysed the 25 top-grossing films, external where the leading actor had a clear love interest, from 2010-15. It found as the actor grew older, the age gap between the stars and their leading actresses increased.