What the cameras didnât capture was how much of herself Sally Field had to destroy to become Norma Rae. The former âcuteâ TV star buried in *Gidget* and *The Flying Nun* walked into an Alabama mill, swallowed the noise, the heat, the nausea, and let her body break before she let the character ring false. Every vibration of that weaving room, every hour she spent studying exhausted workers, stripped away the version of herself Hollywood had mocked and dismissed.
At home, the battle was even more brutal. Burt Reynoldsâ jealousy, his barbed jokes about her âambition,â and his sneering refusal to stand beside her at Cannes and the Oscars forced a choice: stay small for him, or stand tall for herself. She chose the latter. Supported by friends instead of the man who claimed to love her, Sally walked that red carpet alone and won. The statue was for Norma Rae. The victory was for every woman who has ever been told to sit down and be quietâand stood up anyway.