Dorothy is the only woman in history who has had her menopause in public and made it pay.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
In 1900, the average life expectancy of a US citizen was 48, so most menopausal women were dead, which is not a great place to be.
Remember Judy Garland? She retired 40 times.
An audience is going to be able to find a little bit of Dorothy in themselves and relate to this woman.: roles like Dorothy Day are so rare in Hollywood.
When women were excluded from New Deal programs, Eleanor Roosevelt fought to include them. Roosevelt was among a handful of leaders who realized the U.S. economy would not escape the depths of recession without the full contributions of women.
There's no question there needs to be higher-paying opportunities for women. It's not that it hasn't existed in certain categories: Certain women have made a lot of money... Jennifer Lawrence... is being paid a lot of money, rightfully so, for the franchises she's in.
But, of course, she didn't mean that she was going to retire from public life and only when the Queen removed her HRH some years later did she actually drop a hundred charities and just kept five.
Dorothy Hamill was my big idol as a kid. She'd won the Olympics in 1976. She was America's sweetheart with her personality, her talent, her haircut.
Now, if there was one woman in the world who didn't need publicity, who always had too much publicity, it was me.
The only study that the federal government has engaged in with a vengeance is in trying to see if they can make women fertile after menopause.
Whenever women struggle with breast cancer and face better care than ever, that's feminism.
No opposing quotes found.