many women performers prefer to the neutral term "actor" as it is non-gendered and carries with it none of the old baggage of actress = loose woman from the early days of females on stage.
Some women consider 'actress' to be derogatory, like 'stewardess' or 'waitress'. I'm okay with the word myself, but I'm also fairly certain that the term 'actor' serves for both genders.
you really have a beautiful voice.
wipednwired 2 years ago
How right you are. I'll remedy this immediately!
otherpress 2 years ago
many women performers prefer to the neutral term "actor" as it is non-gendered and carries with it none of the old baggage of actress = loose woman from the early days of females on stage.
(just like banjobanbar said!)
tsoyptc 2 years ago
if michelle is a girl, you should say that she is an actress, not an actor (masculine - for a man, boy)
the song is good : )
reix09 2 years ago
Some women consider 'actress' to be derogatory, like 'stewardess' or 'waitress'. I'm okay with the word myself, but I'm also fairly certain that the term 'actor' serves for both genders.
banjobanjar 2 years ago 3