It's sad to discover that the infamous "casting couch" is a very real threat to female actors. Since the #MeToo and Time's Up movements, many brave actresses have shared their stories of horrible abuses of power by producers and casting directors. Every female actor has experienced it, whether it's serious sexual misconduct or just ludicrously sexist comments.
Click through the gallery for some of the worst stories from the top women in the business.
Dame Judi Dench is one of the most accomplished and well-respected actresses of her generation, but even she has dealt with such offenses. Early in her career, she worked primarily in theater, which she loved, but she also auditioned for various film roles. She recently told the Sunday Times that she was rather brutally rejected in the 1960s by a director she chose not to name.
“He was perfectly nice,” she recalled, “but at the end he said, ‘You’ll never make a film. You have the wrong face.’” Dench responded, "that is fine, I don’t like film anyway. I want to go back to the theater." Clearly, the director was very wrong in his estimation of her potential.
Minnie Driver's memoir 'Managing Expectations' describes the worst audition of her life. In an excerpt obtained by E! News, the 'Good Will Hunting' actress details an audition for a chocolate product in London, soon after filming her 1995 big-screen debut 'Circle of Friends.'
Jennifer Lawrence was once called fat in an audition. She was told she would lose the role unless she lost a certain amount of weight.
A young Meryl Streep auditioned for the 1976 version of 'King Kong.' Apparently they thought she wasn't pretty enough and the producer complained in Italian, "Why do you bring me this ugly thing?"
Little did he know, Streep understood Italian! She made a sarcastic comment and walked out.
Before she reached her 'Friends' fame, Jennifer Aniston was told to lose 30 lbs (14 kg) if she wanted to make it in Hollywood. If Jennifer Aniston lost 30 lbs there'd be nothing left!
Sandra Oh was once advised that she should "go back home and get famous, and then come back to LA and see how it goes." The agent said that Asian actors weren't getting work in LA. Looks like she was wrong!
Tracee Ellis Ross once auditioned for the role of a Harvard-educated lawyer so she arrived wearing a sharp suit. She was pressured to change into a "sexy" outfit, which was a mini-skirt and t-shirt with a bra that was a size too small.
As a young actress she was uncomfortable but did what he asked. Years later a drunken man made a comment to her at a party which led to the discovery that the director had kept the video and still showed it to his friends for fun.
When she was starting out, Gwyneth Paltrow was asked if she wanted to finish her audition "in the bedroom."
Emmy Rossum was told by her agent that she was going to get a part in a movie, but the producers wanted to see her in a bikini so they could make sure she hadn't gotten fat. She was even more disgusted by the request because there were no scenes in the movie that would require her to take her clothes off.
Lena Heady recalled the pressure to be sexy in auditions as a young actress. She was once told by a casting director that "the men take these tapes home and watch them and say, ‘Who would you f—?’”
During one audition Lana Condor was told to be "more like Hello Kitty."
Famous actresses share their audition horror stories
You simply won't believe some of these!
CELEBRITY Audition nightmares
It's sad to discover that the infamous "casting couch" is a very real threat to female actors. Since the #MeToo and Time's Up movements, many brave actresses have shared their stories of horrible abuses of power by producers and casting directors. Every female actor has experienced it, whether it's serious sexual misconduct or just ludicrously sexist comments.
Click through the gallery for some of the worst stories from the top women in the business.