Agencies 

Ex-EastEnders star criticises Disney for unrealistic depiction of women

Tamzin Outhwaite says princesses with tiny waists waiting to be rescued by men was not a good role model for her daughters
  
  

Frozen
Disney came in for criticism for its depiction of women in last year’s animated hit Frozen. Photograph: Everett/Rex Features Photograph: Everett/Rex Features

The former EastEnders star Tamzin Outhwaite has criticised the movie giant Disney for setting a dangerous example to young girls with its skinny princesses.

The 43-year-old actor and new addition to the cast of the BBC1 drama New Tricks, said it worried her that most women in showbusiness were constantly dieting.

Outhwaite, the mother of two young girls, hit out at Disney for the way it depicts its heroines, saying that anxiety about body shape begins early.

She told Radio Times magazine: “I know actors who actually say ‘eating is cheating’, and it worries me. I don’t understand why you need to be skinny to play any character, unless it specifically says in the script that she’s a model or dying of consumption.

“I’m too old to play a model. So I’ve stopped worrying about it, which makes me feel much freer. But it’s weird that we’re living in an age where most women, especially those in the public eye, are on a continuous diet.”

Adding that an obsession with looks can start in early childhood, she told the magazine: “Look at all those Disney princesses with their big heads and tiny waists, all waiting to be rescued from their lives by men. That’s not the kind of role model I want for my girls.”

Disney came in for criticism for perpetuating an unrealistic depiction of women in last year’s animated film Frozen.

The smash hit movie, inspired by Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale The Snow Queen, was hailed as progressive for aspects of its storyline, but its doe-eyed and skinny central princess character continued the look of earlier stereotypes.

The red-headed princess in Brave, released by Disney in 2012, had a more normal appearance and loved honing her skills as an archer and swordfighter.

But Disney was later criticised when the Scottish heroine was given a slimmed down makeover for a new toy line.

Outhwaite said that she hoped her New Tricks character, DCI Sasha Miller, was a realistic portrayal of women in the workplace after several depictions of females as either extremely tough or weak.

“We’re very used, by now, to seeing female bosses on the telly. Prime Suspect really kicked that off back in the 90s. But there has been a tendency to see women as either ballbreakers or victims, and there are lots of degrees in between,” she told the magazine.

“I’m not trying to make Sasha a ballbreaker. I’m trying to make it OK for her to be vulnerable, for her not to have all the answers. She’s feeling her way and so am I.”

Amanda Redman and Alun Armstrong quit New Tricks in 2013, while James Bolam was replaced by Denis Lawson in 2012.

The BBC1 drama now stars Nicholas Lyndhurst, Lawson, Dennis Waterman and Outhwaite.

Waterman, who was in the original lineup, said: “Obviously losing three friends, brilliant actors, over a couple of years was upsetting. I considered leaving too, but I enjoyed the job, and I thought: ‘Sod it, I’m staying.’”

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*