Times Colonist

Chalamet donates his salary from Allen film

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK — Timothée Chalamet says he will donate his salary for an upcoming Woody Allen film to charities fighting sexual harassment and abuse, becoming the latest actor to publicly distance himself from the 82-year-old filmmaker.

The breakout star of Call Me By Your Name wrote on his Instagram account on Tuesday that he didn’t want to profit from his work on Allen’s A Rainy Day in New York. Chalamet said he will give his salary to Time’s Up, the LGBT Center in New York and RAINN, an American antisexual assault group.

“I want to be worthy of standing shoulder to shoulder with the brave artists who are fighting for all people to be treated with the respect and dignity they deserve,” Chalamet said.

Chalamet noted that, due to “contractua­l obligation­s,” he couldn’t comment on the longstandi­ng allegation­s against Allen. Dylan Farrow, Allen’s adopted daughter, has said Allen molested her in an attic in 1992. Allen, who has long denied the allegation­s, was investigat­ed for the incident, but not charged.

On Friday, A Rainy Day in New York co-star Rebecca Hall said she was donating her salary from the film to Time’s Up, the recently formed initiative to combat gender inequality in the entertainm­ent industry.

“It’s a small gesture and not one intended as close to compensati­on,” Hall wrote on Instagram.

The film, a romantic comedy due out this year from Amazon Studios, also stars Selena Gomez, Jude Law, Liev Schreiber and Elle Fanning.

Dylan Farrow has previously questioned why the Me Too movement hasn’t ensnarled Allen. In an article published last month in the Los Angeles Times, she wrote: “Why is it that Harvey Weinstein and other accused celebritie­s have been cast out by Hollywood, while Allen recently secured a multimilli­on-dollar distributi­on deal with Amazon, green-lit by former Amazon Studios executive Roy Price before he was suspended over sexual misconduct allegation­s?”

Price, the former head of Amazon Studios, resigned in October.

Since Farrow’s article, others have begun recanting their previous support of Allen. Greta Gerwig, who directed Chalamet in Lady Bird, said last week that she’s had a change of heart.

“If I had known then what I know now, I would not have acted in the film,” Gerwig told the New York Times. “I have not worked for him again and I will not work for him again. Dylan Farrow’s two different pieces made me realize that I increased another woman’s pain, and I was heartbroke­n by that realizatio­n.”

Actors Ellen Page (To Rome With Love), David Krumholtz (Wonder Wheel) and Griffith Newman (A Rainy Day in New York) have also in recent months voiced their regrets at having worked with Allen. The rising chorus throws Allen’s future as a working filmmaker into question. Financial support for the prolific filmmaker has not previously waned, in part because of the eagerness many stars have previously had for working with the acknowledg­ed legend.

Allen’s last film, Wonder Wheel, also an Amazon release, has grossed just $1.4 million US domestical­ly on an estimated budget of $25 million since being released Dec. 1. Overseas, it has grossed $7.8 million.

Some continue to support Allen, though. On Tuesday, actor Alec Baldwin wrote on Twitter: “Woody Allen was investigat­ed forensical­ly by two states and no charges were filed. The renunciati­on of him and his work, no doubt, has some purpose. But it’s unfair and sad to me.

“I worked with Woody Allen three times and it was one of the privileges of my career.”

 ??  ?? Timothée Chalamet says he wants to stand with artists fighting for people to be treated with respect.
Timothée Chalamet says he wants to stand with artists fighting for people to be treated with respect.

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