When did people start calling actresses 'actors'? Isn't a female actor an actress anymore? I was just googling Jack Davenport (Watching Breathless on ITV) and learnt that 'he is married to the actor Michelle Gomez'. It just sounds so WRONG!!
This question was asked on tv a couple of weeks ago and the accepted term is ACTOR for both male and female. The term ACTRESS only applies at awards ceremonies etc. e.g. Best actor, best actress.
I still call female actors actresses - but this is coming back to the thread the other day about whether you call a woman Chairman. Some titles seem more sensible than others, to have a female equivalent.
It's part of a trend. For example, I haven't heard the term Manageress used in the work place for a long time, and in schools the term Head has replaced Headmaster/headmistress.
I thought it was the actresses themselves that now want to be called actors as though that makes them serious professionals rather than bits of fluff. I also think it's daft.
Actors, actresses. Yet another way of making English easier for lazy children. Or feminists on the stage or screen. Equality! When life is all about difference.
I remember seeing an interview with the actor Tony Britton about 25 years ago, insisting that his wife was a sculptor and not a sculptress so I don't think the trend is particularly recent.
No, Jeff Chandler was definitely male! I think Jordyboy was just stating his opinion (not totally relevant though).
Thanks for the explanation though jno, I was trying to work out the derivation of midwife.