Sydney Sweeney has criticized Hollywood’s “false” grandstanding about “women empowering other women”, saying: “None of that is happening.”
The 27-year-old became a star of the TV shows Euphoria and The White Lotus and is now a reigning national sex symbol.
Last year, she and Glen Powell starred in the hit romantic comedy Everyone But You, which Sydney also executive produced.
Now she’s joined a fleet of A-list names like Nicole Kidman, Zoe Saldana and her Euphoria co-star Zendaya on the magazine’s cover. Vanity Fair Hollywood Edition.
She was scathing in her interview about “successful” women in show business who “bash and discredit” the “younger” female “talent” coming up behind them.
Sydney Sweeney has criticized Hollywood’s “false” grandstanding about “women empowering other women”, saying: “None of that is happening”; photographed in February
“It’s very disheartening to see women tearing down other women, especially when women who are successful in other areas of their industry see younger talent working very hard, hoping to achieve whatever dream they may have, and then trying to criticize and discredit any job. what they’ve done,” Sydney said.
All the people say this whole industry is “Women Empowering Other Women.” None of that is happening. “This is all fake and a front for all the other shit they say behind everyone’s back,” the Madame Web star said.
‘I mean, there are so many different studies and opinions on the reasoning behind this. “I have read that throughout our lives we were raised – and it is a generational problem – to believe that only a woman can be at the top,” she theorized.
‘There is a woman who can catch the man. There is a woman who can be, I don’t know, anything,’ explained the Inmaculada actress.
“So everyone else feels like they have to fight each other or take that woman down instead of saying, let’s all stand up.” I’m still trying to figure it out. I’m doing the best I can here. Why are they attacking me?
Sydney’s next project includes a new film version of Barbarella, which was previously made into a movie starring Jane Fonda.
Barbarella originated as a French comic strip and was later adapted into a 1968 science fiction film directed by Jane’s first husband, Roger Vadim.
In this hilarious comedy, Barbarella takes on a mad scientist with an “excessive machine” that causes death by orgasm.
The 27-year-old became a star of the TV shows Euphoria and The White Lotus and is now a reigning national sex symbol; photographed in a viral look at the GLAAD Media Awards in March
(L-R) Glen Powell, Zendaya, Nicole Kidman, Zoe Saldana, Dev Patel, Sydney, Josh O’Connor, Danielle Deadwyler, Jonathan Bailey, Lisa, Ncuti Gatwa and Bill Skarsgard covered the Vanity Fairy Hollywood issue.
Last year, she and Glen Powell starred in the hit romantic comedy Everyone But You, which Sydney also executive produced.
Sydney’s next project includes a new film version of Barbarella, which was previously made into a film starring Jane Fonda; Jane photographed in a publicity photo for the original version.
Jane has since revealed that she’s trying “not” to think about the next movie because “I’m worried about what it’s going to be,” via The Hollywood Reporter.
At the end of 2022 it was learned that a new Barbarella movie was being prepared, with Sydney. chosen to play the female lead.
Jane has since revealed that she’s trying “not” to think about the next movie because “I’m worried about what it’s going to be,” via The Hollywood Reporter.
She argued that the 1968 version made by her first husband “could have been a truly feminist film” if the subject matter had been handled differently.
Jane previously shared that her attitude toward her own Barbarella movie has evolved over the years, telling PeopleTV: ‘You know, when it first came out, I was becoming an activist and a feminist and I thought it wasn’t politically correct, and now I appreciate it because it’s not.’