The Guardian Australia

Evan Rachel Wood accuses Marilyn Manson of raping her on music video set

- Laura Snapes

The actor Evan Rachel Wood has accused the rock musician Marilyn Manson of raping her on the set of the music video for his 2007 single Heart-Shaped Glasses (When the Heart Guides the Hand).

In Phoenix Rising, a new documentar­y about her life and career which premiered at the 2022 Sundance film festival, Wood said that during a previously discussed “simulated sex scene”, Manson “started penetratin­g me for real” once the cameras were rolling. “I had never agreed to that,” she said. She said she was fed absinthe on the set of the video, in which she plays a character styled as Lolita, and was barely conscious to object to Manson’s alleged actions.

The Guardian has contacted representa­tives for Manson, born Brian Warner, for comment.

Wood said that she had “never been on a set that unprofessi­onal in my life up until this day. It was complete chaos and I did not feel safe. No one was looking after me.”

She said she didn’t know how to advocate for herself or say no “because I had been conditione­d and trained to never talk back – to just soldier through” and claimed that the crew “was very uncomforta­ble and nobody knew what to do”.

She said the alleged incident made her feel “disgusting and like I had done something shameful”.

“I was coerced into a commercial sex act under false pretences. That’s when the first crime was committed against me and I was essentiall­y raped on camera.”

She said that Manson gave her “really clear” instructio­ns on how she should describe the video to journalist­s. “I was supposed to tell people we had this great, romantic time and none of that was the truth,” she says.

“But I was scared to do anything that would upset Brian in any way. The video was just the beginning of the violence that would keep escalating over the course of the relationsh­ip.”

Manson, however, teased the media with the notion that there was truth to the video’s apparent “realism”.

Wood previously accused Manson, with whom she was in a relationsh­ip from 2007 to 2010, of grooming her when she was a teenager and said he “horrifical­ly abused me for years.I was brainwashe­d and manipulate­d into submission.”

Wood met Manson in 2006. She was 18, he was 38.

She is among a number of women, including Game of Thrones actor Esmé Bianco, who have accused Manson of sexual and physical violence involving torture.

Manson has denied the charges made against him, calling them “horrible distortion­s of reality … my intimate relationsh­ips have always been entirely consensual”.

He is facing up to four lawsuits accusing him of sexual assault, battery and harassment as well as an investigat­ion into allegation­s of domestic violence incidents by the Los Angeles County sheriff ’s department, which raided his home in November 2021.

After Vanity Fair published an article detailing the first of these allegation­s in February 2021, Manson was dropped by his record label, Loma Vista.

Manson has received support from the rapper Kanye West, who brought him out at a livestream event for his album Donda, on which Manson appears, and at one of his Sunday Service events.

Manson shares in the Grammy nomination­s for Donda, which is up for album of the year and best rap song for Jail, on which Manson appears. Following controvers­y over his recognitio­n, Recording Academy president and CEO Harvey Mason Jr said that personal and legal matters would not affect artists’ eligibilit­y.

Phoenix Rising, a film by Oscarnomin­ated director Amy Berg, will air on HBO in the US in March. It also follows the creation of the Phoenix Act, legislatio­n led by Wood that extends the statute of limitation­s for survivors of domestic violence to pursue charges against their abusers, which was signed into law in October 2019.

 ?? Photograph: Olivia Fougeirol/AP ?? Evan Rachel Wood in a scene from Phoenix Rising.
Photograph: Olivia Fougeirol/AP Evan Rachel Wood in a scene from Phoenix Rising.

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