She nearly died at 8 — then became one of Hollywood’s most powerful women

She grew up in a cold New England house warmed by wood and strict rules: be grateful, be quiet, be nice. That training left her frozen in a speeding car with her near-centenarian great-uncle at the wheel, too scared of seeming rude to demand he stop. It left her voiceless again when a neighbor molested her on her paper route, shame and confusion twisting into the belief that her safety was less important than someone else’s comfort.

Acting cracked that shell but didn’t instantly free her. Hollywood loved her, then tried to discard her at 40. Instead of disappearing, she turned rejection into fuel: choosing motherhood on her own timeline, refusing to let her children be commodified, and building the Geena Davis Institute to expose how girls vanish from the screen. At 69, stepping back into the spotlight, she isn’t asking permission anymore. She’s proof that unlearning politeness can be an act of survival.

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