Beryl is a quiet housewife who secretly dreams of being whisked away to a desert island by a hunky hero. For her birthday, her rowdy, roistering friends take her on a night out to the local pub, where a spotlight falls onto a male stripper, waggling toned, thonged butt cheeks in her face, and before she knows it, the thong has pinged off and Beryl is a new woman. Played out in jiggling scribbles and bouncing brightness, she’s the lead of Girls Night Out, a short animation that pushes women and their desires firmly to the forefront.
“She’s a real anti-heroine. Everybody thinks she’s just a round, nice mum. But she says, ‘Fuck it, I’m going to be somebody!'” says Beryl’s creator, Joanna Quinn, who made the animation while at Middlesex university in the late ’80s. “At some point during the first year, I realised I felt more comfortable drawing men. Probably because, if you look around, they are always the protagonists. So I challenged myself to draw more women,” Quinn tells Creators. At the time, male strippers were becoming a popular form of entertainment, and she decided to make this the subject of her film, visiting a “very dodgy pub in Elephant and Castle” to see what all the fuss was about, accompanied by friends, who were apparently suddenly very eager to help with her research.
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“I didn’t want to make just a cartoon that would be forgotten, full of gags… I started doing research and going to screenings and stuff, and that’s when I realized how many sexist films there were. And it was sort of acceptable because it was a cartoon, so ‘don’t take it seriously!'” This wouldn’t do for Quinn, who remembers the late 80s as a politicized time, with a strong movement against Margaret Thatcher‘s government. The animator name checks feminist magazine Spare Rib as an influence at the time.
When the film was finished—voiced in both Welsh language and Welsh-accented English— Girls Night Out began to attract attention from film festivals internationally, winning three prizes at the 1987 Annecy animation film festival. “I suddenly saw where my film fit in (or didn’t)… There were hardly any other feminist films at all. There were some other women filmmakers, but not that many politically feminist,” says Quinn.
Everything in Girls Night Out bounces with subversive, bubbling vivacity. The animation vibrates with its hand-drawn scribbles, making the film immediate and intimate in a way that can often be missing in films with slicker technology—something that has only increased since Quinn has been working in animation. Quinn has tried out tech accessories, such as Cintiq, that streamline her hand-drawn animation process, but has found herself drawn again and again to the tactility of pen and paper. “The physical thing of drawing makes me happy,” she smiles. It’s a shame that, even though it has been 20 years since she drew Beryl, the progress in technology has not been matched by progress in diversity: “The industry has changed completely in terms of technology, but in terms of jobs for women it hasn’t changed at all,” she sighs.
Beryl spawned further films over the years, and the ballsy Cardiff mum evolved from a spectator at a male strip show, to a unionizing factory worker, to an aspiring artist. Quinn has noticed how much women relate to her character. “That’s what animation is good at. People will recognize themselves or a type and then you can twist it. You’ve got your audience hooked. You realize that there are Beryls all over the world!”
Learn more about Girls Night Out on Beryl Productions International Ltd’s website.
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Source: vice.com