“I also noticed as an actress for years how the hierarchy of the set separated the actors from the crew in this very strange way that serves no one…I think actors would actually like to know more about what’s happening there when you’re pulling my focus? What is that lens change? But the idea of, don’t bother the actors and keep them separate, and don’t look at them. “The no assholes policy, it puts everybody on the same level,” Wilde concluded. Wilde, who previously directed “Booksmart” to major acclaim, added, “If anything, I think we’d all benefit to sort of remove the hero narrative from that structure, and to acknowledge that a director is a sum of all these parts, that we have the opportunity to delegate to all these incredible people that we’ve asked to come on board.” It’s in fact, an incredibly hierarchical system.” And it doesn’t mean that I have to constantly remind you of my my position, because I don’t think anyone on a set has ever forgotten who’s in charge.
And we can multitask.’ It doesn’t mean that anyone needs to be uncomfortable. I do think it may be a uniquely female instinct to say, ‘Look, we can be nurturing. That the pressure cooker has to get to a point where it can be something intense and valuable in that way. Wilde continued, “I think that it is an unfortunate part of the kind of the paradigm, that has been created over the last 100 years, the idea that great art has to come from a place of discomfort and anxiety.
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