That a 71-year-old actor has to ask photographers to call her “Miss Turner” instead of “Kathleen” is not a feel-good story about politeness. It is a reminder that the red carpet still treats women as first-name familiars while men get the title, and that the industry has not fixed the habit until someone with enough stature pushes back.
Turner’s Correction Exposes a Double Standard the Industry Still Hasn’t Fixed
On March 10, 2026, Kathleen Turner made a rare red carpet appearance at the New York premiere of Netflix’s Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man. According to Just Jared, photographers called out her first name to get her attention for photos. Turner responded calmly: “You know what I really like, at this age? Miss Turner.” The photographers complied; one received an approving wink when he got it right. Just Jared noted she arrived with a cane and was seated on a stool while posing, in good spirits despite managing rheumatoid arthritis, which has made her selective about public appearances.
The moment went viral because it was polite, quotable, and visually sharp. The deeper story is that red carpets have long normalized addressing female stars by first name while male stars are more often “Mr.” or simply deferred to. Turner did not invent that imbalance; she named it. As The Daily Beast framed it, she “schooled” photographers on etiquette. The real lesson is that the default remains informal for women until they insist otherwise.
Just Jared and AOL both reported that this was Turner’s first major red carpet of 2026, following an August 2025 appearance at the premiere of The Roses, a remake of her 1989 film The War of the Roses. At that event she was already a visible figure; the March 2026 moment turned a small correction into a precedent. When a star of her stature draws the line, it becomes harder for the industry to pretend the line does not exist.
Red Carpet Name-Calling Is a Pattern, Not a One-Off
Recent red carpet incidents underline the pattern. At the 2026 Golden Globes, Laufey was repeatedly called “Megan” by photographers before correcting them; the moment circulated as a joke, but it reflected the same dynamic of casual misidentification and first-name familiarity. Female stars are often expected to smile and comply when shouted at by first name or the wrong name. Turner’s response was different: she did not laugh it off. She stated a preference and held the line. The Daily Beast described it as schooling photographers on etiquette; the underlying point is that etiquette has not been applied evenly. Male stars are less often yelled at by first name in the same way; the default for women remains informal until they refuse it.
What This Actually Means
Turner’s “Miss Turner” is not about formality for its own sake. It is about who gets to set the terms of address. Women on the carpet are routinely “Kathleen,” “Jennifer,” “Scarlett”—first-name basis by default. Male stars are more often accorded distance or title. The same culture that asks “Who are you wearing?” of women more than men has long treated their names as public property. Turner’s request is a small, visible refusal of that familiarity. The industry still needs to be called out on it; one moment does not change the norm, but it makes the norm harder to ignore.
Who Is Kathleen Turner?
Kathleen Turner is an American actor known for her deep, husky voice and leading roles in 1980s cinema. She received two Golden Globes and nominations for an Academy Award, a Grammy, and two Tony Awards. Her films include Body Heat (1981), Romancing the Stone (1984), Prizzi’s Honor (1985), Peggy Sue Got Married (1986), and The War of the Roses (1989). She voiced Jessica Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) and has worked in television, including Friends, Californication, and The Kominsky Method. She has taught at New York University and worked as a theatre director.
The Peaky Blinders film premiere on 10 March 2026 was held in New York; Turner was not in the cast but attended as a guest. Just Jared and AOL both highlighted her correction and the photographers’ compliance. The moment spread because it was brief, clear and spoke to a wider pattern. One star drawing the line does not fix the default, but it makes it harder to ignore. The Daily Beast’s framing of the moment as Turner “schooling” photographers on etiquette captured the tone: she was not aggressive, but she was firm. The industry still defaults to first names for women on the carpet; until that changes, moments like this will keep surfacing as reminders of who sets the terms. Turner’s “Miss Turner” request was a small, visible line in the sand. Just Jared and AOL reported the premiere as her first major red carpet of 2026; the correction will be remembered longer than the film for the precedent it set.