Times Colonist

Murray defends Hoffman

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NEW YORK — Appearing on the same stage where months earlier Dustin Hoffman faced repeated questions about alleged sexual harassment, Bill Murray praised the actor as a “really decent person.”

“Dustin Hoffman is a great man,” Murray said Wednesday night at Manhattan’s 92nd Street Y. “He’s crazy, a Borscht Belt flirt, has been his whole life. [But] he’s a really sweet man.”

Murray was interviewi­ng his former agent, Michael Ovitz, whose memoir has just been published. Murray and Hoffman were Ovitz clients when they worked together in the 1982 film Tootsie.

During an event last December at the Y, Hoffman was chastised by interviewe­r John Oliver over allegation­s he had groped an intern while making a TV movie of Death of a Salesman in the 1980s. Hoffman denied any wrongdoing and said Oliver was making “an incredible assumption” about him.

Ovitz himself has praised the #MeToo movement, while also speaking warmly of the ousted CBS chairman and CEO Les Moonves, a former client. In his memoir, Who is Michael Ovitz? the former head of the Creative Artists Agency writes that “a reckoning has come” and calls it “absolutely necessary and long overdue.”

He recalls suspending an agent at CAA for harassing an assistant, but also acknowledg­es that with his clients, some of whom he had heard were “treating younger women as sexual objects,” his focus was “frankly on our business rather on social justice.”

“I deeply regret that,” he writes.

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