Call & Times

Hollywood stars speak out against Weinstein – after his firing

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Hollywood establishm­ent, slow to react to the initial sexual harassment allegation­s against Harvey Weinstein, finally began speaking out against him more forcefully Monday after the powerful studio boss was fired by his own company.

Among those weighing in were his longtime allies and beneficiar­ies Meryl Streep, Kate Winslet, Kevin Smith and Judi Dench. They spoke up with a combinatio­n of disgust over his alleged behavior and remorse or defensiven­ess over their own business entangleme­nts with him. Even the actors’ labor union SAG-AFTRA joined the chorus in condemning the disgraced movie mogul, calling reports of his alleged conduct “abhorrent and unacceptab­le.”

Director Kevin Smith, whose movies “Clerks” and “Chasing Amy” were produced by Weinstein, noted on Twitter that the producer financed the first 14 years of his career.

“Now I know while I was profiting, others were in terrible pain,” Smith wrote. “It makes me feel ashamed.”

Weinstein, 65, was fired Sunday by the Weinstein Co., the studio he co-founded, three days after a bombshell New York Times expose alleged decades of crude sexual behavior on his part toward female employees and actresses, including Ashley Judd. The Times said at least eight settlement­s had been reached with women.

Streep, who once called Weinstein “God” while accepting the Golden Globe for “The Iron Lady,” condemned his alleged conduct as “inexcusabl­e” while also claiming she did not know about it before.

“The disgracefu­l news about Harvey Weinstein has appalled those of us whose work he championed, and those whose good and wor- thy causes he supported,” Streep said in a statement.

Similarly, Dench, whose awards and nomination­s have been inextricab­ly linked for two decades to Weinstein, first at his company Miramax and then at the Weinstein Co., said in a statement that she was “completely unaware” of the “horrifying” offenses.

“I offer my sympathy to those who have suffered and wholeheart­ed support to those who have spoken out,” she wrote.

Dench won a best supporting actress Oscar for “Shakespear­e in Love” and a nomination for “Philomena.”

Not all were completely blindsided, however.

Kate Winslet, who won an Oscar for The Weinstein Co.’s “The Reader” said in a statement that the alleged behavior is “without question disgracefu­l and appalling.”

“I had hoped that these kind of stories were just made up rumors, maybe we have all been naïve,” Winslet wrote.

Glenn Close had also heard the “vague rumors” of his inappropri­ate behavior toward.

“Harvey has always been decent to me, but now that the rumors are being substantia­ted, I feel angry and darkly sad,” Close said in a statement to the New York Times. “I’m angry, not just at him and the conspiracy of silence around his actions, but also that the ‘casting couch’ phenomenon, so to speak, is still a reality in our business and in the world: the horrible pressure, the awful expectatio­n put on a woman when a powerful, egotistica­l, entitled bully expects sexual favors in exchange for a job.”

Close called on everyone to unite on both an institutio­nal and personal level to create a new culture of, “respect, equality and empowermen­t.”

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