Actress Emma Thompson refuses to be held up as an example for teenage girls in UK, say Will Woodward & Raekha PrasadOscar-winning actress Emma Thompson has played many great parts on stage and screen. But she has made clear that there is one she just has to draw the line at -- that of official role model. The actress demolished the notion that she might sign up to an advisory group of female high-flyers set up by Baroness Jay's Women's Unit to inspire teenage girls.
Instead she declared herself ``rather pissed off'' with the new Minister for Women. ``It's very nannyist,'' Thompson said. ``I wasn't asked if I'd be a role model. I found out when a friend rang me to jeer at me. My immediate response was an overwhelming desire to go out and score a load of cocaine in rebellion. Because when I was young my role models were Mick Jagger and Marlon Brando.''
The double Oscar-winner suggested single mothers would be a better influence for young girls. ``If Baroness Jay wants to create rolemodels she should focus on single mothers -- they're our brave heroines.'' And unlike Lady Jay, who said that ``feminism is seen as negative, complaining about things'', Thompson declared herself proud to be a feminist. ``I've always called myself a feminist,'' she said. ``I count myself privileged in that I've benefited from it. I associate it with liberty and a struggle to evolve an equality within social status.''
The Cabinet Office insisted it had always made clear that Thompson had not yet been approached but the actress was the sort of person that the Government had in mind. Lady Jay herself described the plan to attract famous women as ``exaggerated''. Other candidates for the group included the former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell and the latest teenage pop starlet, Billie.
A Cabinet Office spokesperson said: ``We are sorry if Emma Thompson doesn't consider herself a role model. Her name was raised by the media as one of a number of successful women who could be role models for teenagegirls.''
-- The Observer News Service
Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.