'Nashville' And 'Political Animals' Tackle Female Rivalries Beyond Catfights

What 'Nashville' And 'Political Animals' Say About Female Rivalry

"My whole mantra from the beginning is this is not a catfight! I'm not doing a catfight!" Connie Britton, the Friday Night Lights and American Horror Story actress said on stage at the Television Critics Association press tour on Friday where she was introducing her new ABC drama Nashville. The show stars Britton as country singer Rayna James, whose sales have dropped as she enters middle age, and whose label wants her to tour with Juliette Barnes, a Taylor Swift-esque ingenue played by Hayden Panettiere. It was smart of Britton to get out in front of the issue, given that the pilot, written by Thelma & Louise scribe Callie Khouri, features the two women taking delicious swipes at each other on questions of age, authenticity, and talent. And it gets at a larger question: How can pop culture get at the rivalries between women, who are often pitted against each other in the corporate and entertainment worlds, without devolving into cliche catfights?

In Nashville's case, Britton and Panettiere hope to avoid that trap by making the characters' differences substantive. "When I have to go on set and complete go against the grain and complete disrespect someone so wholeheartedly, I get a little shy," Panettiere said. And she suggested that the things that divide Rayna and Juliette would turn out to be less record sales and support from their shared label, but life stages and philosophical differences. And Britton said that where the characters are in straightforward competition, Nashville would be about the forces that create a false sense of competition for resources. "I think we have a real opportunity here to show the complexities of these two kinds of people in show business, and particularly women," she told critics. "I for one feel a really strong responsibility to do that in a way that is true and dignified."

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