When Did the Term "Actress" Go Out?

I was watching an old rerun of the Carol Burnett Show and she was doing her audience question thing, and a young man stands up and asks her

“Do you think you’re a good actor?”

Then the audience and Carol break up laughing.

Carol reply:

“I’m a good actor but I’m a much better actress.”

Most people now refer to “actor” to mean either man or women. I know a lot still use the “correct” terms, but when did the meaning switch to make actor the common term for either sex

It hasn’t. People use *actor *when they want to be to inclusive, but *actress *is still the common term among the public and within the industry when referring specifically to a woman. (Casting directors will ask for an actress, not a female actor. Magazine articles will call someone an *actress *more often than a female actor.) SAG now gives an award for best performance by a female actor, but it’s in the minority. I don’t think actress is likely to go the way of aviatrix or authoress any time soon because males and females remain very different in the kinds of roles they are called on to play.
Google the two terms and see the results.

And the Academy Awards still separate the two categories, giving two awards to Actors and two awards to Actresses each year.

i’ve always thought the “ess” endings were a bit awkward, as english tends toward neutral nouns. most have been dropped. won’t be long now and there will be best actor male role, best actor female role.

Semi-recent thread with some discussion, including the Oscar category point.

The two actresses whom I know insist on being referred to by the feminine form.

Virtually every gender-specific English word is going the way of the Dodo in favor of gender-neutral terms.

Other examples (besides actor/actress):

Stewardess - “Flight Attendant”
Waiter/Waitress - “Server”
Police + Fireman/woman - “Police officer”, “Firefighter”
Businessman - “Business person”
Secretary - “Administrative/personal assistant” (unless you’re talking about a governmental department head)
Mailman - “Postal worker” or “mail carrier”
Barman or barmaid - “Bartender”

Etc. etc.

From what I’ve observed, it seems to depend on the publication. Some have changed over to actor for all performers. Others still maintain the actor/actress distinction.

I noticed the talk shows, like Letterman, Leno, Oprah and the entertainment shows like TMZ will refer to females as actors. Like they ask “When did you decide to become an actror” or “She thinks she’s a great actor?”

On another note, I think female pilots should demand to be call an aviatrix :slight_smile: