Cannes Film Festival Under Fire After British Actress-Filmmaker Denied Entry with Her Baby
British actress, poet and filmmaker Greta Bellamacina has said she was initially denied entry at Cannes and then asked to wait for two days to get a delegate pass for her baby.
British actress, poet and filmmaker Greta Bellamacina has said she was initially denied entry at Cannes and then asked to wait for two days to get a delegate pass for her baby.
After a "stressful debate", Greta and her child were allowed into the accreditation area, though she says she was told that her buggy would have to be sent through a different entrance, reported Guardian.
The actress, poet and filmmaker says that she was then told that her child would require a delegate's pass. After she offered to pay the fee, she was told that it would take 48 hours to process her request and was asked to leave the site.
"I'm outraged at the absurdity of this backwards attitude. As if female filmmakers needed further obstacles to equality in our industry. Ironically, my film is about a young single mother trying to balance her life as a writer. She is treated quite patronisingly in some scenes in the film, but never as rudely as I was treated as a mother at the film festival today," Greta said in a statement.