(Bloomberg) -- Departing Sony Pictures Entertainment co-Chairman Amy Pascal defended the film studio’s practice, exposed
in hacked e-mails, of paying female stars like Jennifer Lawrence
less than their male counterparts.
“I run a business,” Pascal said at the Women in the World
event last night in San Francisco, where she was interviewed
onstage by Tina Brown. “People should know what they’re worth.
Walk away.”
Lawrence and Amy Adams were paid significantly lower fees
than the male co-stars of “American Hustle,” Bradley Cooper,
Christian Bale and Jeremy Renner. The gap was made public by
hackers who stole thousands of e-mails, spreadsheets and other
internal documents in a cyber-attack on Sony Corp.’s film studio
last year. Female film executives at Sony also made less money
than men.
The episode led to calls for equal pay in Hollywood.
Charlize Theron used it to negotiate a salary equal to that of
her male co-star, Chris Hemsworth, for the 2016 Universal
Pictures film “The Huntsman,” The New York Post reported in
January.
“American Hustle,” an Academy Award-nominated film, was
released in 2013. Lawrence, also the star of the “Hunger
Games” series, was named the highest-grossing actress of 2014
by Forbes magazine. That stat is based on box-office receipts.
“I’ve made her a lot more money since then,” Pascal said.
Lively Inbox
The gender-pay flap was just one controversy to come out of
the hacking of Sony Pictures. Pascal’s lively e-mail inbox
produced a trove of exchanges that revealed behind-the-scenes
backbiting and verbal warfare at the studio.
Among those attacked was Angelina Jolie, one of Hollywood’s
biggest stars, who was called a “spoiled brat” by producer
Scott Rudin in a running feud with Pascal over which movies the
studio would make. Jolie’s project, a biopic of the ancient
Egyptian pharoah Cleopatra, is still moving forward, said
Pascal.
“The first person I talked to was Angie after that e-mail,” Pascal said. “We all understood because we all live in
this weird thing called Hollywood. If we were all actually nice
it wouldn’t work.”
Sony is replacing Pascal -- she said at the event she was
fired -- and she will move to a new role in May, with a
production deal on the Sony lot. Her portfolio includes the
Spider-Man movies, the studio’s biggest franchise. Brown
suggested that her reported pay package of $30 million to $40
million over four years was “quite a haul.”
“Thank you,” Pascal said.
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