A Career For Women Why Not? Says Madeline Carrol
Careers for women—whethe rthey be stalling parts on the screen or clerkhsips in offices—are vigorously defended by Madeleine Carroll as a reply to a fast-growing movement to bar married women from employment, “It is ridiculous to say that a woman must stay at home because she is married,” Miss Carroll asserted. “If a married woman can be a successful author, or painter, or sculptor, or musician—as so many are—there is no objection, but let a married woman take a job as a secretary, a teacher, or even a clerk, and she suddenly finds herself a storm centre. “There is no question of ‘stealing’ a job or keeping a man from workings You will usually find that the married girl and her husband are carefully saving towards the time when they can have a home and a family. When they reach that point their savings will put many men to work in the building of that home. If the girl chooses to continue working, then usually she gives employment to someone^—maids, gardeners, cooks, some sort of household workers—to take care of her home for her.** Currently working in Paramount’s “Honeymoon in Bali,” Miss Carroll firmly believes that married women should have a chance to earn money in any profession they may select. Miss Carroll’s present picture casts her as a business woman, though an unmarried one. Fred Mac Murray and Allan Jones also are starred in the cast, with four-year-old Carolyn Lee, Osa Massen and Helen Broderick in support.
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Waikato Times, Volume 125, Issue 20988, 15 December 1939, Page 4
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260A Career For Women Why Not? Says Madeline Carrol Waikato Times, Volume 125, Issue 20988, 15 December 1939, Page 4
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