THE NEW HOLLYWOOD POWER PARADIGM
Fortune US|April - May 2024
Inside the sisterhood of stars changing the narrative.
ELLIE AUSTIN
THE NEW HOLLYWOOD POWER PARADIGM

CONNIE BRITTON doesn't often hear the word "no." The Emmy-nominated actress and producer has a string of iconic credits, including starring roles in The White Lotus, Friday Night Lights, and Nashville. She's a venture investor, a Dartmouth board member, and a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador.

But the show that her company, Deep Blue Productions, was developing in 2022 wasn't winning over the top brass at a Hollywood studio she pitched.

An intergenerational drama called Hysterical Women, it would center on four women, each experiencing a different hormonal shift. "We've got a daughter who is getting her period, a mother who is perimenopausal, her sister who is trying to go through fertility treatments, and then we've got the grandmother who is through menopause and having the best sex of her life," Britton told an audience of female corporate leaders at the Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit in October. "It's a fantastic show! Who wouldn't watch that show?" The audience laughed and murmured assent.

And yet, Britton told them, Hysterical Women was not greenlit. The reason for this? The studio already had a show "on the air with four women," and executives felt there wasn't the space-or audience appetite-for a second.

The anecdote elicited rueful laughter. Granted, a show about "hysterical," hormonal women might not be for everyone. But Britton's point was clear: Men still run much of Hollywood.

The demoralizing reality, Britton told Fortune in a follow-up interview, is that even now, "there is not as much space for women-run and women-led programming."

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