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“Sexist, Egotistical, Lying, Hypocritical Bigot Edition”

“9 to 5” is finally coming out on DVD!

Years after being fired for refusing to sleep with her boss, Jane Fonda — empathizing with harassed women everywhere — developed a popular 1980 film called 9 to 5, about sexism in the workplace.

The comedy arrives on DVD Tuesday (Fox, $20) in what is being marketed as the “Sexist, Egotistical, Lying, Hypocritical Bigot Edition,” with commentary from stars Fonda, Lily Tomlin and Dolly Parton.

Calling from her Atlanta home before catching a plane to L.A., thrice-married Fonda, 68, chuckles when asked whether she has experienced sexism since making the film. “You’ve got to be kidding,” she says, aghast. Sexism, she says, is something she has experienced in “my marriages. Maybe that’s why I’m not married anymore.”

And this is why we love La Parton:

Mishearing a question about unwanted sexist encounters, Parton says, “I’ve only had sexual encounters that I’ve wanted. But not as many as I’d like,” then laughs when the question is clarified.

After all, Parton went right from 9 to 5 to shooting The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, “and I made a better whore than I did a secretary.”

Parton, who says she grew up in a family of sexist men, often jokes about her rarely seen real-life husband, Carl Dean, but she turns uncharacteristically sentimental when asked if he is a sexist. “In all seriousness, I have a very fine husband — a true gentleman who respects women,” says Parton.

What pisses me off about this article is that there is way more attention paid to the stars’ relationships and marriages than to their accomplishments. After all, 9 to 5 was a movie about women in the workplace, and you can’t tell me that even these three haven’t experienced sexism since the film came out.


11 thoughts on “Sexist, Egotistical, Lying, Hypocritical Bigot Edition”

  1. Not that I care one whit about the political objections surrounding Jane Fonda, but could you have at lease suggested an alternative film that focuses on women? Capote is a fine film, but it doesn’t quite cover the same issues.

  2. But……..

    But………..

    Did we stop doing that “sexism” thing, like, 20 years ago?

    Just after we gave on up racism, right?

  3. man, I loved that movie as a kid.

    what’s it say about my upbringing that my folks let, nay, encouraged me to watch a flick about workers uniting and humorously destroying their sexist bourgeoisie overlord? I think I may have been younger than six the first time I saw it.

    That and Clue. I have fond memories of those movies.

  4. I have seen that movie, well, I don’t even know how many times. I love it.

    Dolly Parton’s mishearing of that question reminds me of This is Spinal Tap, when someone suggests that the album cover for Smell the Glove is sexist and one of them says “What’s wrong with being sexy?”

  5. That’s an awesome movie! My favorite part is when the copier goes nuts. I have had that happen to me so many times. Perhaps not exactly in the same way. Nevertheless it was a very satisfying dramatization.

  6. Love the movie and have been slapping my forehead all day that someone would ask Fonda if she’s experienced any sexism since the film. Good lord!

    Good point, zuzu, re: the focus on their relationships rather than their professional efforts. Odd that. [/sarcasm]

  7. OK, hands up if you have that left-hand-pounding-the-piano riff going through your head now….

  8. What pisses me off about this article is that there is way more attention paid to the stars’ relationships and marriages than to their accomplishments

    Valid point. Unfortunately, the story is an entertainment fluff piece. That is the focus.

  9. Did you see Salon Broadsheet’s Dolly Parton quote yesterday?

    She’s certainly one heck of a gal! [I blogged both your comments about Ms. Parton here, along with some other Parton quotes I found, if anybody’s interested…]

    OK, hands up if you have that left-hand-pounding-the-piano riff going through your head now….

    Apparently she wrote that song on set using her lacquered fingernails like a zither for percussion. [She writes many of her songs that way.] One of the promotional videoclips on Amazon actually shows Parton, Tomlin & Fonda singing the song accompanied by Parton’s fingernails. Strange but true…

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