Showbiz

How Sharon Stone Lived Twice

A well-done sexual picture is worth a thousand words for the entertainment industry like the story of Sharon Stone based on sex, lies and a videotape.

By Nadya Chishty-Mujahid | May 2021

Although they are not necessarily Scandinavian, certain Hollywood starlets display the type of frosty Nordic looks that lend themselves to truly beautiful screen photography. Three names that come to mind are Grace Kelly, Michelle Pfeiffer, and Sharon Stone. Their chiseled features, excellent but sensual figures and hypnotic light eyes make them commanding and lovely screen presences regardless of the role concerned. Think Pfeiffer in Dangerous Liaisons and Kelly in The Swan. And Stone in the now notorious Basic Instinct.

Small wonder then that in her brutally honest and riveting memoir, The Beauty of Living Twice, Sharon Stone has described how she has almost consistently had to battle her way through the patriarchal screen industry that, for better or for worse, regarded her as a sex object and femme fatale par excellence. Jaded members of humanity might cynically roll their eyes and state that in a multi-million dollar industry a producer or director wanting to make screen profits will push an actress to her limits in unconscionable ways and Stone should hence have become used to it. A case in point is Nicole Kidman who did hundreds of scene retakes before Stanley Kubrick professed himself satisfied with her performance in the orgiastic, but brilliant, Eyes Wide Shut.

Moreover, a well-done sexual picture is worth a thousand words for the entertainment industry, and no one who has viewed it can ever forget the scene in Basic Instinct where Catherine Trammell (played capably by Stone) uncrosses her legs during an investigational examination into homicide and displays an undeniably alluring vulva. Stone claims that this move was made without her consent, although in her memoir she grimly notes that film producers coerced her into sleeping with co-stars in order to produce better chemistry on set. Again, it can be argued that forcing an actress to turn into a prostitute for the purposes of film success is a grossly unethical move, but Stone’s experiences were hardly unique, neither the first nor the last insofar as the psycho-sexual harassment of women actresses is concerned.

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