Producer Marcia Nasatir knew her own worth. Too bad Hollywood didn't.
From Ann Hornaday, film critic at The Washington Post:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/marcia-nasatir-appreciation/2021/08/05/62832bfa-f52f-11eb-9068-bf463c8c74de_story.html
In 1974, Nasatir made history as the first woman to become a production executive at a major studio. That studio was United Artists, which had been co-founded by Mary Pickford 55 years earlier. (It only took half a century for another woman to ascend.) But she was just as often shut out of the big jobs and paydays that her male colleagues routinely gave themselves. In A Classy Broad, Nasatir explains Done. Next. within the context of a particularly disappointing period, when she was elbowed out of a top position at UA and then not invited to join her former colleagues as a partner when they formed Orion Pictures (she eventually joined that company as a production executive).
It's fascinating reading, and Hornaday provides some valuable context from up-to-the-minute news stories on women in Hollywood.