Daily Mail

What do stars who fawned over child rapist Roman Polanski have to say now?

For years Hollywood excused the director’s vile paedophili­a. In the wake of Weinstein, HADLEY FREEMAN confronted his apologists . . .

- by Hadley Freeman

Forty years ago this week, roman Polanski went from being one of the most celebrated film-makers in the world to becoming the United States’ most notorious fugitive from justice. on February 1, 1978, after 42 days in jail, Polanski fled the U.S. while awaiting final sentencing, having pleaded guilty to unlawful sexual intercours­e with a minor. on these facts, everyone agrees.

there are no hazy conspiracy theories — we know exactly what happened because Polanski admitted to it and later wrote about it in astonishin­g detail in his autobiogra­phy, roman By Polanski, published six years after he left the U.S. and went to France, where he still lives.

there are some quibbles about who said what, but the generally agreed facts are as follows: in March 1977, Polanski, who was then 43, took a child, Samantha Gailey (now Geimer), who he knew was 13 years old, to the actor Jack Nicholson’s house to take photos of her for a magazine. there, he gave her champagne and, according to her, Quaaludes (a powerful tranquilli­ser drug). He then had sex with her, drove her home and, the next day, was arrested.

the facts have never altered. What has changed is how this case is discussed in the public sphere.

For a long time, the simple — and somewhat simplistic — divide was that while people in Europe viewed Polanski as a tragic artist undone by U.S. prurience and corruption, Americans saw him, as he put it in his autobiogra­phy, as ‘an evil, profligate dwarf’.

But, in truth, for many British and American actors, working with Polanski never lost its cachet, and arguably had even more once he became excluded from the U.S. mainstream.

Sigourney Weaver, Harrison Ford, Johnny Depp, Ewan McGregor, Pierce Brosnan, Kate Winslet and many more have appeared in Polanski movies in the decades since his conviction, and questions about why they were working with a convicted child rapist were seen as tacky — proof of a rigid mind more focused on gossip than art.

WHENWinsle­t was asked last September whether she had any qualms about working with Woody Allen, another director accused (but, unlike Polanski, never arrested and never charged) of a sex crime against a minor, she replied: ‘Having thought it all through, you put it to one side and just work with the person.

‘Woody Allen is an incredible director. So is roman Polanski. I had an extraordin­ary working experience with both of those men, and that’s the truth.’

When the Harvey Weinstein story broke, the reaction among the movie industry was wide- eyed shock that someone so many of them knew and worked with could be an alleged rapist.

‘I didn’t know. I don’t tacitly approve of rape,’ said Meryl Streep.

And yet, only a decade and a half earlier, Streep had stood and applauded when Polanski won best director at the 2003 oscars, not so much tacitly approving rape as explicitly celebratin­g a convicted child rapist.

If only anyone had known about Weinstein they would never — never! — have worked with him, movie insiders say.

And yet, for the past 40 years, many of them have been falling over themselves to work with a self- confessed child rapist, even defending him by pointing to his artistic credential­s.

Debra Winger described Polanski’s arrest in Switzerlan­d in 2009 as a ‘philistine collusion’.

reactions to Weinstein come soundtrack­ed with the distinct sound of bandwagon-jumping; thanks to the #Metoo campaign, the public mood is firmly on the side of listening to victims, and Hollywood has keenly followed suit.

on Sunday night, at the London Critics’ Circle awards, only months after defending Polanski and Allen, Winslet spoke tearfully about ‘ bitter regrets I have at poor decisions to work with individual­s with whom I wish I had not. Sexual abuse is a crime, it lies with all of us to listen to the smallest of voices’.

yes, if only there had been some way Winslet could have known about these decades- old cases before signing on to work with two directors accused of sex crimes!

this kind of hypocrisy about Polanski makes you wonder how serious the industry really is about dealing with this problem, as it claims to be.

By the beginning of this century, while the American public remained firmly set against Polanski, the mood in Hollywood was openly in his favour.

there was that applause from Hollywood luminaries when he won the 2003 oscar (Polanski did not attend the ceremony, as he was officially still on the run).

In 2008, film- maker Marina Zenovich caught the mood and pushed it further with her documentar­y, the queasily titled roman Polanski: Wanted And Desired, which argued that Polanski was the victim of gross judicial misconduct during his case.

(In one of those ironies we can only appreciate in retrospect, this documentar­y, which presents an energetic case for the defence of a sex offender, was produced by the Weinstein Company.)

Zenovich’s movie focuses on how Polanski had the misfortune to come up in front of Judge Laurence rittenband, who was obsessed with self-publicity and determined to make an example of Polanski. rittenband was thought to be considerin­g sentencing him to 50 years in prison, which was when Polanski fled.

Much emphasis is made in the movie about how Polanski’s celebrity hurt him during the trial, which is true. But Zenovich does not mention how it also helped him.

POLANSKIwa­s originally indicted on six counts of criminal behaviour, to which he pleaded not guilty. But Gailey ( Polanski’s victim) became so frightened by the attention the case attracted, because of Polanski’s fame, she tried to withdraw from it entirely.

As a result, her attorney arranged the plea bargain, in which five of the charges were dropped and Polanski pleaded guilty to statutory rape, which was the least serious charge against him. Like

all arguments in Polanski’s defence, the documentar­y stresses the previous tragedies in his life: his mother, four months’ pregnant, was killed in the Holocaust; his wife, Sharon Tate, eight months’ pregnant, was brutally murdered by the Manson family.

But one can have enormous sympathy for those losses, and also feel that offering up dead women as mitigating factors for raping a girl doesn’t really wash.

I wrote about the documentar­y when it came out, as it struck me as astonishin­gly exculpator­y. After all, no matter how badly the legal system failed Polanski, this didn’t cancel out the fact that he raped a child.

But I was, it turned out, grossly out of step with the times. readers, acquaintan­ces and even friends couldn’t tell me enough how wrong I’d got it.

By now, celebritie­s were falling over themselves to defend Polanski. He hadn’t committed ‘raperape,’ Whoopi Goldberg said on TV. ‘Very clearly, and he’s proven this, roman Polanski is not a predator,’ Johnny depp said, apparently unaware of the childrape issue.

When Polanski was arrested in Switzerlan­d in 2009, where he was jailed for two months and then put under house arrest (the house, in this case, being a chalet in the Alps), debra Winger claimed ‘the whole art world suffers’.

A petition demanding his release was signed by more than 100 actors and filmmakers, including Emma Thompson (who later asked to have her name removed), Yasmina reza and Tilda Swinton.

Harvey Weinstein wrote an open letter in his support, in which he claimed: ‘Whatever you think of his socalled crime, Polanski has served his time.’ Supporting Polanski became like owning an ecofriendl­y petrolelec­tric hybrid Prius: something any fashionabl­e, wellheeled liberal should do.

Well, eight years is a long time in sexual mores.

Weinstein is now firmly banished and actors are apologisin­g for appearing in Woody Allen movies.

And yet Polanski’s name is mentioned only sporadical­ly, even though he is the only one with an actual conviction.

Moreover, more allegation­s have been made against him: in 2010, British actor charlotte Lewis said Polanski abused her in 1983 when she was 16. Last year, four more allegation­s emerged: former U.S. actor Mallory Millett said Polanski tried to rape her in 1970; German actor renate Langer said the director raped her in Gstaad in 1972 when she was 15; a woman identified as robin M said Polanski assaulted her in 1973 when she was 15; and a fourth, Marianne Barnard, accused him of assaulting her in 1975 when she was ten. Polanski denies the claims.

In recent months, Polanski’s supporters in Britain and the U.S., who were once so vocal in his defence, have been notable by their silence.

So I decided to ask them how they felt about Polanski now.

I start by emailing documentar­y filmmaker Zenovich to ask if she feels attitudes towards Polanski have changed since she made her movie and its followup, roman Polanski: odd Man out, about the Zurich arrest.

But she is too busy preparing for the Sundance Film Festival to engage.

I then contact 25 actors who have worked with Polanski since his arrest, including Sigourney Weaver, Ben Kingsley, christoph Waltz, Kate Winslet, Kim cattrall, Pierce Brosnan and Jodie Foster.

Some don’t reply at all, despite repeated approaches. A few will only talk off the record. The rest say they are too busy.

Adrien Brody, who won an oscar for The Pianist, was ‘unable to participat­e due to schedule’. Kingsley, who’s worked with Polanski multiple times, would ‘need to pass’.

I then contact the filmmakers who signed the 2009 petition demanding Polanski’s release, including david Lynch, Wes Anderson and Martin Scorsese.

Again, some ignore me, a couple will talk off the record, some are too busy to talk at all.

Alexander Payne is currently ‘focused on his new baby’. Tilda Swinton ‘would like to graciously pass on being interviewe­d’.

only one person who signed the petition agrees to speak on the record: the actor Asia Argento, who has since accused Weinstein of abusing her.

I ask why she signed the petition in the first place. ‘I was asked by friends from the cannes Film Festival to sign it. I foolishly went along. That’s no excuse, and it’s a decision I regretted almost immediatel­y and have regretted ever since,’ she says.

‘The more I’ve learned about the original case and subsequent events, the more horrified I have become.’

Since Argento went public with her allegation­s against Weinstein in october, a lot has been written about how the film industry will no longer cover up abuse.

But I ask her how it feels to see Polanski, a convicted sex offender, still held up as a celebrated director, and what it says about the industry’s true feelings about women and girls.

‘It speaks terribly of the industry,’ she replies. ‘It’s shocking that people like Polanski are still revered, celebrated by actors and fellow filmmakers around the world who continue not only to promote their work, but also to work with them. I hope the tide is finally turning.’

While researchin­g this article, I had a couple of offthereco­rd discussion­s with actors and filmmakers about their true feelings about Polanski.

one admitted they regretted their previous support, given the new allegation­s, but couldn’t bring themselves to say so publicly.

But mainly I heard people insist their friend is not a rapist.

They trotted out the familiar defences: the Holocaust and his murdered wife, of course. ‘It was a long time ago’ was another one, as was: ‘He’s served his time.’ (In 2009, the expert legal affairs writer Jeffrey Toobin reported that at that time the prison sentence for an adult defendant who pleaded guilty to statutory rape was likely to be three years in a state prison.)

TWO said to me that it was a ‘special situation’ because ‘ the girl had been up for it’ (this was a common theory at the time. The probation report described Samantha Gailey as ‘physically mature’ and ‘willing’).

‘Samantha has said that the trauma she has experience­d in the past few decades has had a greater impact on her than the original crime,’ one said to me, which is doubtless true.

But Gailey wouldn’t have had to endure any attention if Polanski hadn’t raped her.

It’s remarkable how much energy Polanski’s supporters have expended defending him, given that the director himself has always been extremely clear about why he did what he did: he is sexually attracted to ‘ young girls’, and he has never seen this as a problem.

After all, when he was told he was being arrested for rape, he was genuinely shocked: ‘I was incredulou­s; I couldn’t equate what had happened the day before with rape in any form,’ he writes in his autobiogra­phy.

The year after he fled the U.S., he gave an interview to Martin Amis, in which he declared: ‘Judges want to f*** young girls. Juries want to f*** young girls — everyone wants to f*** young girls!’ (Amis, clearly shocked, wrote: ‘ Even Humbert Humbert [ the paedophile in Vladimir nabokov’s novel Lolita] realised that young girls don’t really know whether they are willing or not. The active paedophile is stealing childhoods. Polanski, you

sense, has never even tried to understand this.’)

After Tate was murdered in 1969, when Polanski was 36, he spent time in Gstaad, where he slept with schoolgirl­s aged 16 to 19, who were, he writes, ‘more beautiful, in a natural, coltish way, than they ever would be again’.

In 1976, he met Nastassja Kinski and, according to his autobiogra­phy, slept with her. When he then learned she was only 15, he continued to sleep with her for several months, he wrote.

In 1986, he met the woman who would become his next wife, the actress Emanuelle Seigner. He was 51. She was 18.

Polanski’s autobiogra­phy was written seven years after his arrest, and his account of the crime does not smack of a man overly burdened with feelings of guilt.

He describes grooming Gailey on the drive to the photoshoot: ‘I asked when she’d first started having sex,’ he writes, as if that’s a normal thing for a 43-year-old man to ask a 13-year-old girl.

At Jack Nicholson’s house, she tells him she’s thirsty, so he gives her alcohol.

‘We weren’t saying much now,’ Polanski writes. ‘But I could sense a certain erotic tension between us.’

Gailey sensed something different. According to her grand jury testimony, she repeatedly asked him to take her home and she was ‘afraid of him’.

When he started kissing her she told him: ‘No — keep away.’ When he performed oral sex on her, she was ‘ready to cry’ and begged him to stop.

Polanski recounts what he describes as ‘making love’ so sexily you can practicall­y hear his heavy breathing, writing: ‘She was not unresponsi­ve.’

Recalling the crime, Gailey herself graphicall­y described him having vaginal sex with her. ‘I was mostly just on and off saying: “No, stop.”

‘But I wasn’t fighting really because there was no one else there and I had no place to go. He didn’t answer me when I said no...’

She then recounted how he also had anal sex with her.

Afterwards, in Polanski’s car, Gailey cried.

But he doesn’t mention that in his book. Instead, he describes trying to arrange a date with her.

Polanski will turn 85 this year. He has lived almost half his life under the shadow of what Weinstein described as ‘his socalled crime’.

Polanski’s own attitude has remained bullish; in October last year he gave an interview in which he focused his ire on the judges who let him down.

‘I know what I am, what I have and haven’t done, how things really were and are,’ he writes at the end of his autobiogra­phy.

Thanks to the candour of Polanski, the rest of us have always known, too — including everyone in the film industry who has worked with him since.

 ??  ?? WINSLET: CALLED HIM AN INCREDIBLE DIRECTOR
WINSLET: CALLED HIM AN INCREDIBLE DIRECTOR
 ??  ?? STREEP: APPLAUDED HIS OSCAR WIN
STREEP: APPLAUDED HIS OSCAR WIN
 ??  ?? WHOOPI: IT WASN’T ‘RAPE-RAPE’
WHOOPI: IT WASN’T ‘RAPE-RAPE’
 ??  ?? HIS VICTIM
HIS VICTIM

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