About five years ago, Dr. Ellen Currano, a paleontologist at the University of Wyoming, felt like she was wasn’t receiving the same opportunities as her male colleagues. “I had to work harder to be recognized for what I was doing,” Currano told Know Your Value.
Currano was having dinner with her friend Lexi Jamieson Marsh, a documentary filmmaker, and was venting about the challenges in her male-dominated field. Marsh could relate, because her industry is heavily male as well. Currano recounted a faculty meeting where she shared an idea, which was dismissed, and then five minutes later, a male colleague offered the same idea, which everyone deemed amazing. “Maybe if I just put a beard on my face, people will listen to me,” Currano told Marsh.
“Oh, that’s such a good idea! We should do this!,” Marsh exclaimed. And just like that, “The Bearded Lady Project,” a documentary film and photographic project that celebrates female paleontologists and highlights the obstacles they face, was born.
“The Bearded Lady Project: Challenging the Face of Science,” is an intriguing photo exhibit of about 40 female paleontologists in the field and in the lab posing with a beard on their face. The exhibit has toured the country for two years and will be displayed in the Smithsonian this fall. The ladies also launched a website to feature the portraits, have a feature-length film and are working on a book with photographs and essays that share the perspectives of female scientists.
The goal of the project is to start a conversation about the challenges that women scientists face. Currano said she hopes to help pave a smoother journey for future female paleontologists. Throughout her career, she has at times felt very isolated and as though she was in her own bubble. “There weren’t people who looked like me or had feelings like me in my field, so I felt very alone and demoralized,” she said.









