Following Meryl Streep and Patricia Arquette’s public statements about sexism in Hollywood, Kristen Stewart is now following suit.

The Twilight star, who recently made history for becoming the first American actress to win France’s César award, speaks frankly about gender politics in a new interview with Harper's Bazaar U.K. “Women inevitably have to work a little bit harder to be heard,” she tells the magazine. “Hollywood is disgustingly sexist. It's crazy. It's so offensive it's crazy.”

Stewart does not get into specifics about her experiences or observations—at least in the excerpts released thus far; the full interview is not yet available online. But she joins peer Carey Mulligan in denouncing the lack of opportunities for females in the industry.

“In terms of the amount of interesting roles there are for women it’s obviously massively sexist,” Mulligan told Time Out London, according to The Guardian. “There's a lack of material for women. A lack of great stories for women.”

Speaking about her upcoming film Suffragette, about the campaign for women’s voting rights in the U.K., Mulligan said, “The mere fact that it’s taken 100 years for this story to be told is hugely revealing. . . . This is the story of equal rights in Britain, and it took years of struggle and women being tortured, abused, and persecuted, and it's never been put on-screen. It’s such a reflection of our film industry that that story hasn’t been told yet.”

During a panel last week, Mulligan’s Suffragette co-star Streep offered her own theory why there aren’t more female-driven films—because men are not able to empathize with women as easily as women can empathize with men, and as such, movies about women, which will only theoretically appeal to one gender, are less likely to be made. In her words:

“This active empathy that women go through from the time we are little girls, we read all of literature. All of history. It’s really about boys, most of it. But I can feel more like Peter Pan than Tinkerbell or Wendy. I wanted to be Tom Sawyer, not Becky. And [women] are so used to that active empathizing with a protagonist of a male-driven plot. That’s what we’ve done all of our lives—you read history history, you read literature, Shakespeare. It’s all fellas. But [men] have never had to do the other thing. And the hardest thing, for me, as an actor is to have a story that men in the audience feel like they can know what I feel like. It’s very hard for them to put themselves in the shoes of a female protagonist.”

In Patricia Arquette’s Oscar acceptance speech earlier this year, the Boyhood star used her moment at the podium to remind the room that sexism extends beyond the amount of roles available for females and the scope of Hollywood. “To every woman who gave birth. To every tax payer and citizen of this nation, we have fought for everybody else’s equal rights,” she said to cheers from the audience, and a standing ovation from Streep. “It’s time to have wage equality once and for all, and equal rights for women in the United States of America.”

Want to give it a shot, Hollywood? Being called “massively sexist” and “disgustingly sexist” by two of your most talented young actresses, and knocked by your greatest living actress, all in the span of one week, is certainly not great for your reputation.

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