"The Rights of the Woman"
Author: Melonie Magruder
Authors' phone number: (310) 926-5800
SYNOPSIS
Synopsis, The Rights of the Woman:
Olympe de Gouges was a radical feminist in Revolutionary France, at a
time when women had no civil, financial or personal rights in society.
A petite bourgeoise from the French countryside, Olympe reinvents
herself in Paris, where she hobnobs with the aristocracy and political
elite. There she becomes a prolific writer, political activist,
playwright and social agitator so intent on breaking norms to bring
equality to all men and women, that she makes powerful enemies at the
forefront of the Revolution.
A passionate advocate, she fights for the civil rights we take for
granted today, but which were unheard of in the 18th century: equal
treatment for women under the law, rights for divorced women, abolition
of slavery, women’s suffrage. She argues for ending capital punishment
and for the civil rights of all classes, particularly women’s rights.
"A woman has the right to mount the scaffold. She must possess equally
the right to mount the speaker's platform,” she says, foreshadowing her
own appearance before a bloodthirsty Revolutionary tribunal.
When the French National Assembly publishes Lafayette’s Declaration of
the Rights of Man in 1789 - the template for both the French and the
American Constitution - she quickly publishes a Declaration of the
Rights of the Woman and the Female Citizen.
But Robespierre and leaders of the French Revolution are threatened by
her mouthy advocacy, and Olympe follows King Louis XVI and Queen Marie
Antoinette to the guillotine. However, Olympe retains the last laugh,
as her radical ideas become the laws of the land by the 20th century.
Awards Won
Rhodium Award winner for WRPN Screenplay Competition
Quarter-finalist in Table Read My Screenplay Competition